Hi Cam...
You're 34 -- I too have been where you are... I am 54 -- I was diagnosed at 13 in 1973... When I was diagnosed -- we were told that "a cure was just around the corner..." Mom volunteered for the CFF -- they were and are a pretty amazing organization... And one point in the late 70s or early 80s they switched their focus from patient assistance to funding research and finding a cure or treatment -- it caused a lot of people problems, but it seemed that it needed to be done to fund what was REALLY going to help us in the long run... Again, at that time with the new focus on funding research, we were told a cure would be around the corner... Then they found the genetics of CF -- again, surely, a cure was around the corner... It kinda got old after a while -- and I grew as skeptical as most.
Kalydeco sounds amazing -- though the first iteration is helping just a relatively small percentage of us (but helping in amazing ways), there are other drugs in the pipeline that will extend the number of us that Kalydeco helps... I will be very honest -- this is the first time in many MANY years that I'm excited about something for CF sufferers -- something that may actually give long-term help...
Even for those of us who have sustained substantial lung damage -- if we can stop that NOW, we may be able to lead a normal-ish life. There is a part of me that has great hope for Kalydeco and for other treatments in the pipeline... There is another part of me that, like Pat (windex), have been-there-done-that-heard-that so many times that we're just not buying that there will be something available in sufficient time for us...
I had a double-lung transplant 14+ years ago -- so, my lungs are no longer CF and the other aspects of CF simply have not impacted my life too greatly yet... But, I hope that there is something out there for you and so many other CF sufferers...
Another problematic issue is -- though you and I see this as a big deal and a devastating disease, in the grand scheme of things there just ain't that many of us out there... The CF Foundation does a great job in collecting money for research -- and frankly, CF takes out more children than many diseases, and people hate to see children die... That, sadly, is an advantage for us... But -- there are only around 30,000 of us in the US with CF. That sounds like a lot -- but for companies researching and producing drugs and whatnot -- it's a tiny amount when you consider there are millions of diabetics, hundreds of thousands of people suffering other lung diseases, millions dealing with cancers -- when we start picking and choosing who research dollars are going to, we've got a LOT of competition -- which is why a focused group like the CFF is important for us...
Love, Steve