Supportive care

Supportive care for blood cancer focuses on helping you feel better. This is by managing your symptoms and side effects from cancer or treatment. The goal is to improve comfort, well-being, and overall quality of life.

Supportive care can include supporting:

  • Physical needs such as pain, fatigue, or nausea.
  • Information needs like understanding your diagnosis, treatments and what might happen next.
  • Emotional and social needs, including anxiety, stress, or practical challenges.
  • Spiritual needs like helping you find meaning, peace, or connection during your care.

You can receive supportive care alongside your cancer treatment. Or on its own to focus on symptom management and quality of life. It’s important to remember that supportive care does not treat cancer itself. It focuses on helping you manage the effects of cancer and its treatment so you can live as well as possible.

Visit our Online Support Service to connect to information, tools and people that can support you. The Online Support Service has information on:

  • Cancer related fatigue.
  • Complementary therapy.
  • Emotional resilience.
  • Long term side effects.
  • Managing school and study.
  • Returning to work and more.

Use the External Providers Directory to find trusted community services such as:

  • Physiotherapists
  • Exercise programs
  • Wellbeing centres and more.

Accessing supportive care services

There are many supportive care services available at treatment centres. Access to some of these services may require a referral from your doctor or nurse. Some smaller or regional centres may have limited services.

Generally large centres have:

  • Social workers
  • Dietitians
  • Physiotherapists
  • Occupational therapists
  • Psychologists or counsellors
  • Music and art therapists
  • Pastoral care workers.

Outside the hospital, there are websites, hotlines, and organisations to support you.

You can contact the Leukaemia Foundation’s Healthcare Professionals for support. To talk to one of our team, call 1800 620 420, Monday to Friday 9am-4pm AEST. You can also apply for support via our website.

WeCan is an Australian website that provides easy access to trusted supportive care resources, services, and information for people affected by cancer. You can use their Supportive Care Needs Screening Tool to help identify the areas where you may need extra support, whether that’s physical, emotional, practical, or spiritual.

Our Mob and Cancer has links to support Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander people.

Supportive care – medications, infusions and therapies

Supportive care that helps and protects your body is often given or prescribed at treatment centres. These medications and infusions may include:

  • blood transfusions
  • injections to support your white blood cell count (growth factors)
  • preventative antibiotics, antivirals and antifungals
  • vaccines
  • infusions to support your bone health (bisphosphonates).

Blood transfusions

When you have blood cancer, it is not uncommon to have lower-than-normal levels of red blood cells, white blood cells, or platelets. Supportive care includes managing changes to help keep you feeling as well as possible. You may be advised to have a blood transfusion or platelet transfusion. This helps increase your red cell or platelet counts and reduces symptoms. You might also be given an immunoglobulin (IVIg) infusion if your antibody levels are low, to help support your immune system and reduce the risk of infections.

Click on the headings below to read more about each type of transfusion

Receiving a blood transfusion

There are two important steps to go through before you can receive a blood transfusion. These are:

Signs of a blood transfusion reaction

It is possible to have an allergic type reaction to a blood product. Some symptoms of a blood product reaction can include:

  • feeling of impending doom
  • chest pain
  • breathlessness
  • tingling feeling in the mouth or lips
  • fever
  • chills
  • changes to your heart rate or blood pressure.

It is important to tell your nurse if you feel unwell or different during a blood transfusion.

Growth factors

Growth factors are natural chemicals found in your blood. They help your bone marrow make different types of blood cells. Some of these growth factors can also be made in a laboratory. They are used as medicines to increase blood counts.

  • Neutrophils are a type of white blood cell that helps your body fight infections.
  • G-CSF (granulocyte colony-stimulating factor) helps your bone marrow make more neutrophils.
  • Low neutrophil levels can happen because of cancer treatment or blood cancer.
  • G-CSF is given as a subcutaneous injection to increase your neutrophil count.
  • Growth factors may have some side effects, some of these include:
    • chillsheadaches
    • bone pain.

Iron chelation therapy

Iron chelation therapy is a type of treatment used to manage iron overload. Iron overload can happen when you receive a lot of red blood cell transfusions. When you have too much iron, it can deposit in important organs such as the heart, liver, and pancreas. This can lead to heart failure, liver damage, and diabetes.

Iron chelation medications bind to the iron. This allows the body to remove the excess iron through urine and faeces.

Iron chelating medications are:

  • Oral tablet – Deferasirox
  • Subcutaneous or intravenous infusion – Desferrioxamine

Iron chelation therapy is usually ongoing, or until your iron levels are normal. Your treatment team will tell you when to take iron chelating medication and for how long.

Side effects of iron chelation therapy might include:

  • nausea
  • vomiting
  • dizziness
  • diarrhoea
  • rash
  • muscle cramps
  • red coloured urine
  • vision and hearing changes.

Sometimes side effects can impact your quality of life. Your treatment team will discuss side effects and management options with you.

Iron chelation therapy is not suitable for all people. Talk to your treatment team about the possibility of iron overload.

Antibiotics, antivirals and antifungals

Antibiotics, antivirals, and antifungal medications are prescription medications. They are given to people with blood cancer to help prevent bacterial, viral, or fungal infections. This is called prophylaxis. These medications are normally an oral tablet. It is important to take them as instructed by your treatment team.

There is a risk you may still get a bacterial, viral, or fungal infection while you take these medications. So, it is important that you take measures to protect yourself from infection. This could include:

  • Frequent hand washing with soap and water.
  • Wearing a mask in crowded spaces.
  • Avoid sick family members or friends.
  • Wear a mask, gloves, long sleeves and shoes whilst gardening.

Vaccines

Vaccines are important for people with blood cancer because you have a higher risk of infection. Vaccines help prevent infections. Inactivated vaccines are the safest. Talk to your treatment team before having any vaccines, including checking the best time to have them.

Bisphosphonates

Bisphosphonates are medications used to strengthen and protect bones. They are also used to treat high levels of calcium in the blood (hypercalcaemia). If you have blood cancer, myeloma, it is likely you will have bisphosphonates.

People with myeloma:

  • experience more bone loss than bone growth.
  • are at higher risk of developing bone fractures because of this imbalance.

When the balance between bone growth and bone loss is uneven, it can lead to:

  • osteoporosis
  • lytic lesions (holes in bones)
  • bone pain
  • high levels of blood calcium
  • bone fractures.

Bisphosphonate treatment can reduce the risk of:

  • bone pain
  • high levels of calcium in the blood
  • bone fractures.

Bisphosphonate treatments include:

  • Zoledronic acid – 15 minute infusion through a vein.
  • Pamidronate – 90 minute infusion through a vein.
  • Clodronate – tablets taken twice a day.

Bisphosphonates have some side effects including:

Read more about ONJ below.

You’ll need to have a dental assessment and any dental treatment before you start bisphosphonates. You’ll also need regular dental reviews and blood tests while you have treatment. Tell your treatment team if you experience any side effects.

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