Blood cancer multiple myeloma, once a death sentence, is now highly treatable. Here's why.
(USA Today) — After Judith Harding was diagnosed with multiple myeloma in 2009, she decided to retire, sold her condo, dropped out of her PhD program and moved nearer to her family, preparing to "live out my last days."
Multiple myeloma has long been a killer. Therapies are changing that.
(Washington Post) — Audrey Greene, a retired sales agent from Long Neck, Del., celebrated her 80th birthday in March. Diagnosed in 2010 at age 68 with multiple myeloma, a cancer that attacks the white blood cells and has always had a dire prognosis, she didn’t expect to live past her early 70s. She was wrong.
‘Nothing prepares you for this’: A cancer expert and survivor on how to manage a life-threatening diagnosis
(Fortune Well) —At age 37, Kathy Giusti was happily married with a 1-year-old when she heard the grim phrase from her doctor: “You have cancer.”
“The word hits you like a sucker punch. The fear and anguish are immediate for you and those that love you,” Giusti says. “And worse, nothing prepares you for this. You don’t know where to turn.”
(USA Today) — After Judith Harding was diagnosed with multiple myeloma in 2009, she decided to retire, sold her condo, dropped out of her PhD program and moved nearer to her family, preparing to "live out my last days."
(Washington Post) — Audrey Greene, a retired sales agent from Long Neck, Del., celebrated her 80th birthday in March. Diagnosed in 2010 at age 68 with multiple myeloma, a cancer that attacks the white blood cells and has always had a dire prognosis, she didn’t expect to live past her early 70s. She was wrong.
(Fortune Well) —At age 37, Kathy Giusti was happily married with a 1-year-old when she heard the grim phrase from her doctor: “You have cancer.”
“The word hits you like a sucker punch. The fear and anguish are immediate for you and those that love you,” Giusti says. “And worse, nothing prepares you for this. You don’t know where to turn.”
(Prevention) — I expected to be diagnosed with breast cancer ever since my identical twin sister Karen started treatment for the disease seven years ago. It was only a matter of time. And while I wasn’t happy to hear the words, I felt ready for the fight—again.
(The Hill) — Underrepresentation of racial minorities in clinical trials for cancer and other diseases isn’t new; there has been a significant dearth in the representation of minorities in oncology trials for years.
(Harvard Business Review) — Cancer is the second-leading cause of death in the United States, but there are significant disparities by race and ethnicity. While the rate of new cases is similar for white and Black patients, the death rate for Black cancer patients continues to be higher (173 per 100,000 people) than for white individuals (153 for white individuals).
(AARP) — Beating the odds on multiple myeloma for more than 25 years makes Kathy Giusti, of New Canaan, Connecticut, much more than a survivor. She is a warrior and a miracle woman, which means she knows how to fight back. So, when she was diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer in January, she knuckled down and put on her boxing gloves, determined to beat that one too. But as Kathy has learned over the past 25 years, this is a fight you can’t do alone.
(CNN) — Over the last year, people have made so many sacrifices to protect their health, from taking care of kids amid school closures to staying isolated from our elderly loved ones. Concerns about family health have driven many of us to great lengths to ensure we stay safe during this public health crisis.
(Health) — After being diagnosed with multiple myeloma, Kathy Giusti started the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF), a nonprofit organization, to help accelerate the search for a cure.
(Time) — Each year, more than 1.7 million people in the United States hear three dreaded words: You have cancer. As common as cancer is, no one expects cancer to happen to them.