ANNOUNCER: What's more, his CML had become resistant to the interferon and ARA-C. But by 1999, researchers at MD Anderson and elsewhere were testing a new treatment for CML, a drug that would come to be called "Gleevec."
HAGOP KANTARJIAN, MD: So I think even though he was pretty disappointed that he wasn't responding well anymore to the interferon/ARA-C, we were looking forward to putting him on this new medication and seeing how he does with it.
WILLARD LANGLEY: Dr. Kantarjian kept telling me, he said, "Hey," he said, "we've got something coming that will help you."
HAGOP KANTARJIAN, MD: We were already testing the Gleevec, and we had some inclination that it was going to work well.
WILLARD LANGLEY: And so I went on it December the 16th, and I've been told that I was the 45th patient put on it here. And then in March or April, when I got the results of my bone marrow, I was pretty close to remission. I felt a lot better.
HAGOP KANTARJIAN, MD: Within three months from starting the treatment, we achieved a complete hematologic remission. And that lasted for about two years, so he had very effective control over his disease
ANNOUNCER: The first two years on Gleevec, Willard achieved a significant response. The leukemia was affecting fewer than one in 200 of his white blood cells, but then it came back. The number of Philadelphia-positive cells, a marker for CML, had increased to 50 percent.