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I'm a scientist turned stay-at-home mom turned cancer survivor turned survivor survivor, who packs each day with fun with her children, learning oppor...
 
 
 
 

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Changing the conversation about cancer

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After a weekend workshop with 800 energetic, amazing, committed women (including 8+ incredible bloggers and 30+ awesome metastatic women) fired up to fight for the END of breast cancer at the National Breast Cancer Coalition Advocacy Training Conference, I have new energy and new spirit and new FIGHT in me, both against this horrible disease in my own body and against its formation of tumors and spread in bodies (called metastasis) in general.  There are some exciting ventures afoot, and 800 fired-up women canvassing the Hill today, talking to their Senators, Representatives, and the Legislative Assistants (LAs) that make things happen on Capitol Hill. 

There is hope - but there is more than hope - there is now a DEADLINE and a plan for the END of breast cancer tumor formation and metastasis: January 1, 2020.  Ridiculous? Perhaps.  Daring? Definitely.  More details will be coming, interspersed here with my usual stories of motherhood and science and friendship, and I'll be introducing you to some amazing women, my fellow #cancerrebel warriors who STAND UP and FIGHT BACK and will not be comforted by pretty colors or hope.  We need more than ribbons, my friends.  We need RESEARCH that will bring about BIG change, more than incremental changes and improvements in the drugs that poision us (but poision the cancer just a little bit faster).  I love my chemo, don't get me wrong, but wouldn't it be great if we could SUPPRESS the tumor cells into dormancy or make the surrounding tissue UNWELCOMING so that they would move on, and "leave the neighborhood" entirely?  There is promising research, and it is exciting.  I can tell you more about that in the coming weeks if you like, but today I want to echo four statements from the conference speakers (with citations), and I hope you can hear the urgency through your computer screen or smartphone:

1. More than 500,000 women still die of breast cancer each year.  "The five-year survival rate for women diagnosed with localized breast cancer is 88-93%; the five-year survival rate for women diagnosed with metastasized breast cancer is just 15%."  -  Steven Hursting, researcher, citing Hanahan and Weinberg, Cell 100: 57, 2000.  We hear all the time about survival rates improving - but for those of us with metastasis, there is a long way to go.

2. "Over 30% of women initially diagnosed with earlier stages of breast cancer will develop metastasis" -- and no one knows which ones. - Musa Mayer, survivor and advocate, citing O'Shaughenssy, Oncologist 10: 20-29, 2009.  If new research can prevent secondary metastasis, women with primary tumors can live longer and healthier.

3. "Age-adjusted cancer mortality has not changed significantly in the last 60 years: it has decreased just 5%, while heart disease decreased 65% in the time period 1950-2005," - Sharon Begley, journalist.  We can do better.

4. "Only 5% of cancer research funds are spent on metastasis, yet it kills 90% of all cancer patients." - Patricia Steeg, researcher, in Sleeman and Steeg, EurJCancer 46:1177, 2010; Science Daily 1 June 2010. 

Can we cure cancer? Gosh, I hope so.  Can we prevent tumors from forming and metastasis from spreading?  We must.

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Susan Niebur (@WhyMommy) writes about life, kids, cancer, career, and balancing it all at http://toddlerplanet.wordpress.com, http://motherswithcancer.com, and http://womeninplanetaryscience.comFor more of the conversation, please follow these bloggers and warriors too: Elizabeth@ccchronicles, @pinkribbonblues, @kathikolb, @uneasypink@jodyms, @talkabouthealth, and @deadline2020 - and learn more about #deadline2020.  

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