Diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma in 2013, Def Leppard‘s Vivian Campbell is currently “completely clean” of cancer, and after taking some time to recover from treatment, the now 62-year old guitar player returned to the stage with his iconic band in May.
Following “hardcore chemotherapy” and a successful bone marrow transplant, Campbell confirmed that his PET scan in April showed no signs of cancer.
In an interview with SiriusXM’s Trunk Nation With Eddie Trunk, he said:
“I’ve been very lucky, actually. I got an early diagnosis for Hodgkin’s lymphoma 13 years ago, 12 years ago, something like that. [I went] through the mill with all sorts of chemo and immunotherapy and combination therapies, and 10 years ago I did an autologous stem cell transplant, which means using my own stem cells. That didn’t work. The cancer kept coming back, and then a couple of years ago, it really got bad. So it was the first time in having to deal with it that I was seriously concerned about it. And the doctors told me really my only chance for of cure was to do a donor transplant. And that’s exactly what I did. Starting last summer during our tour, I started doing more chemo in preparation for it. And then right after the tour, they started giving me very hardcore chemo leading up to the transplant. I was supposed to start after Thanksgiving, and I lost my donor 10 days beforehand. So that was a kick in the nuts. But I was very fortunate that they found me another one in December. And on New Year’s Eve, I went into hospital. I was in for about three and a half weeks, and I did what has turned out to be a really, really successful transplant. So I did a PET scan in the middle of April and I’m a hundred percent clean, completely in remission for the first time in 12 or 13 years. And I am obviously overjoyed. You couldn’t ask for more than that.”
In return for saving his life, Campbell hopes to buy his donor a beer one day, adding “A young man, actually. I don’t get to know who he is for a couple of years, but a 21-year-old man. And they always prefer a youthful donor. Obviously, I’m gonna buy him a beer — or two or three.”
As part of a clinical trial for the medication pembrolizumab amid his battle with the disease, Campbell underwent immunotherapy treatment, and during his Lymphoma Voices podcast in 2023, he said:
“I’m still dealing with the lymphoma.” “It’s sort of like – it’s an American expression – Whac-a-Mole. You beat something back and then it pops up somewhere else. But it’s been a pretty consistent battle, but it hasn’t been too difficult for me. I deal with it fine. I’ve been able to live my life.” “For the bulk of those 10 years, I actually was doing immunotherapy. Starting in June of 2015, I started taking a drug called pembrolizumab. I remember at the time my doctors wanted me to do radiation and maybe a combination of radiation and chemo. And I just thought, ‘Well, let’s just try this immunotherapy thing. Let’s see if this works.’ So I managed to get on the trial. I’m happy to say that it worked well for me.”
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Author: Saul Goode
Photo: Alec MacKellaig