Dr. Robert Fontana, professor of internal medicine and medical director of liver transplantation at U-M Health System, obtained emergency approval from the federal Food and Drug Administration to give Gholston a treatment that combined two oral antiviral medications, sofosbuvir and daclatasvir.
Drug therapy offers new hope to hepatitis C patients
September 16, 2013 at 1:00 am
Karen Bouffard
The Detroit News
Troy — A new drug regimen for liver transplant
patients — tried for the first time ever at the University of Michigan Hospital
— could bring hope to millions of hepatitis C suffers and the man who received
the initial treatment has made it his mission to educate the public about the
disease.
Robert Gholston Jr., a 59-year-old General Motors Co.
durability test driver from Troy, contracted the hepatitis C virus from a blood
transfusion he received after he was hit by a car at age 9. By 2011, it had
destroyed his liver, and he received a transplant at U-M Hospital. But within
six months, the virus was back — and aggressively attacked his liver.
Dr. Robert Fontana, professor of internal medicine and
medical director of liver transplantation at U-M Health System, obtained
emergency approval from the federal Food and Drug Administration to give
Gholston a treatment that combined two oral antiviral medications, sofosbuvir
and daclatasvir.
Continue reading @ The Detroit News
Wish him the best and fastest recovery!
ReplyDeleteis there any way to receive this treatment without being near death ?
ReplyDeleteUpdate-Recruiting HCV Clinical Trial
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