Cancer Drug Causes Patient To Lose Fingerprints And Be Detained By US Immigration
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- DeliaTheArtist
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http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/05/090526202730.htm
One of the strangest stories I've heard!"Immigration officials held a cancer patient for four hours before they allowed him to enter the USA because one of his cancer drugs caused his fingerprints to disappear. His oncologist is now advising all cancer patients who are being treated with the commonly used drug, capecitabine, to carry a doctor's letter with them if they want to travel to the USA.
The incident is highlighted in a letter to the cancer journal, Annals of Oncology. According to the oncologist, several other cancer patients have reported loss of fingerprints on their blog sites, and some have also commented on similar problems entering the USA.
Dr Eng-Huat Tan, a senior consultant in the medical oncology department at the National Cancer Centre, Singapore, described how his patient, a 62-year-old man, had head and neck cancer that had spread (metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma), but which had responded well to chemotherapy. To help prevent a recurrence of the cancer the patient was put on a maintenance dose of capecitabine, an anti-metabolite drug.
Capecitabine is a common anti-cancer drug used in the treatment of a number of cancers such as head and neck cancers, breast, stomach and colorectal cancers. One of its adverse side-effects can be hand-foot syndrome; this is chronic inflammation of the palms or soles of the feet and the skin can peel, bleed and develop ulcers or blisters. "This can give rise to eradication of finger prints with time," said Dr Tan.
The patient, Mr S*, developed a mild case of hand-foot syndrome, and because it was not affecting his daily life he was kept on a low dose of the drug.
"In December 2008, after more than three years of capecitabine, he went to the United States to visit his relatives," wrote Dr Tan. "He was detained at the airport customs for four hours because the immigration officers could not detect his fingerprints. He was allowed to enter after the custom officers were satisfied that he was not a security threat. He was advised to travel with a letter from his oncologist stating his condition and the treatment he was receiving to account for his lack of fingerprints to facilitate his entry in future."
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Denica_Cassandra
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i saw this on cnn, how interesting!
- 9 months ago
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Denica_Cassandra
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Valence
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Well isn't this a new awsome way for criminals to escape the law.
If only pot were legalized.
- 9 months ago
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Valence
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T_Rose
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I climb so much I never have fingerprints. Hope they never try to print me at the border! haha
- 9 months ago
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T_Rose
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sickinjersey
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Yes it does do that i have been on it.it made lumps in my palms and on the soles of my feet that hurt. laws suck when they do not consider the sickest people like myself.They act like if you are that sick you should stay home. I have many problems traveling and laws that do not consider people's health make it even harder, not to mention leaving the country, that has been a problem a couple of times just trying to go to canada for the day.
- 9 months ago
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sickinjersey
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AndreaKnoll
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Yeah, my mom has done so much dish washing her finger prints no longer show up in scans which foxes officials when she's traveling. Think officials will take a note from my dad which explains the problem?
- 9 months ago
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AndreaKnoll
