Joe Imel/Daily News To her surprise, Lori Monroe (center) of Bowling Green was diagnosed with lung cancer in September 2001 just after hiking and water-skiing with her daughters Alyson (left), 13, and Emily, 16.
Published 12:00 am Saturday, July 10, 2004
Lung cancer survivor working to empower others
Bowling Green woman seeks better treatments for, greater knowledge of ever-changing disease
Saturday, July 10, 2004
Lori Monroes daughter Emily, 16, wears a button that reads Cancer Sucks … Lung Cancer Really Sucks.
For the 45-year-old Bowling Green woman who was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer in September 2001, it has sucked away some of her ability to do uphill hikes. It sucked away valuable time with her children, Emily and Alyson, 13, while she endured three surgeries to rid both lungs of the disease. It sucked away about 60 percent of her left lung. And she worried that it would suck the life out of her.
But Monroe persevered. Now she has one message she wants to get across to people, especially to those with lung cancer: Be your strongest and best advocate.
Keep pushing for better treatments, she said. You dont get a second chance at making another decision. Seek second opinions and third opinions.
Monroe, who is nurse at The Medical Center, never thought of herself as a candidate for lung cancer.
I started smoking in 1979, she remembered. I quit at the beginning of 1986 when I got pregnant with Emily.
But people who dont have any known risk factors can get lung cancer, too.
Theres an assumption that if you smoked, you created your disease. People assume that you are a smoker, she said. I have bronchioalaveolar carcinoma. Its supposedly not related to smoking. Doctors dont know what causes it or where it comes from.
Monroes ordeal began in September 2001 following a hysterectomy, when an X-ray found something in her lung.
I had no symptoms whatsoever, she said. My doctor thought it might be pneumonia.
Monroe began taking antibiotics, but the spot was still there after a second X-ray. Further testing revealed she had Stage IV cancer the most advanced type.
At first doctors said there wasnt anything that could be done, she said. Chemotherapy for lung cancer isnt very effective. Doctors dont usually do surgery for it because the life expectancy is so short. The choice was whether to start treatment at all.
Monroe didnt want to give up, though. She felt she had two very important reasons to live her daughters.
My biggest fear was of leaving the girls and not being ready to do that, she said. You have to learn to have faith and trust and go on.
Monroe sought a second opinion at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. Her oncologist is Dr. David Carbone, who specializes in lung cancer and is a professor at Vanderbilts Department of Medicine. Her surgeon is Dr. Mathew Ninan, assistant professor of cardiac and thoracic surgery.
At first, Dr. Ninan said he couldnt do the surgery, she said. He called me back later that night and said hed do the surgery. He said he didnt know if surgery could change anything for me, but he didnt know if it couldnt.
Ninan had done some quick research on cases similar to Monroes and decided he wanted proceed with the operation.
Lung cancer is a changing disease that was seen as something that happened in older people, especially men who had smoked for 30 or 40 years, Ninan said. The people who are getting the disease are changing. It is happening more and more in women who never smoked or who gave it up years before. I smoked in college is the typical story. We dont know why it is now more common in women
Of all cancers, lung cancer is the biggest killer, but it doesnt get the same attention as others do, Ninan said.
Its like were ignoring the elephant in the room, he said. This is my lifes work. Im not in this as a business-making enterprise. I want to get the best results for the patients.
Monroe is also worried about ignorance of the disease.
There has been very little done as far as advocacy, she said. We dont have enough survivors to become advocates.
Monroe had nodules removed from her left lung later in 2001 and began chemotherapy and an experimental drug to stop the tumors in January 2002.
My oncologist said that if it kept the cancer from spreading then it was very, very encouraging, she said. All the cancer in the left lung was gone and the right lung was stable.
Experimental drugs dont work for all patients, Ninan said, but is an area that he said doctors will study over the next few years.
Theyre more gentle than chemotherapy, he said. Theyre targeted to the tumor, (but) a lot of patients dont respond to them.
Then the drug company stopped supplying Monroe in October 2002 it thought the tumor in her right lung had been growing, she said.
They said theyre werent sure if they want to keep giving me the experimental drug, so Id go week after week without treatment, she said. I began to get nervous.
In December 2002, she had another surgery to remove the nodule in her upper part of her right lung. She was cancer-free for 16 months.
Then in April, when she went for a routine scan, Carbone found cancer in the upper part of her left lung. She couldnt stand by and do nothing, so she had surgery to remove the nodules. Last month she had to spend time in the hospital for an air leak in one of her lungs, but it has corrected itself, she said.
My right lung is intact, but 60 percent of my left lung is gone, she said. After having three surgeries, Ive decided to wait and see on chemotherapy. I go in every two months for CT scans. There are new experimental drugs that are less toxic than chemo that stop growth to the tumor.
Monroe said her doctors have been her saving grace.
They have helped me find new treatment and think out of the box, she said. A lot of doctors and oncologists feel that there is no hope. They offered me a chance to fight.
Ninan pointed out that its best to find medical professionals who are experts in dealing with aggressive cancer.
A lot of doctors dont know much about this field, he said. Dont ignore small changes on an X-ray. If you have a persistent cough, you need to get it checked right away. Once this cancer has spread beyond a certain level, good results start decreasing dramatically.
Since their ordeal, the familys faith has strengthened. Living Hope Baptist Church has helped the family a lot, she said.
I remember going before the church and asking for prayer and doors opened, she said. I lot of prayers have been answered. A lot of doors opened up because of prayer.
She has also waged a big fight against lung cancer. Her efforts garnered her and Vanderbilt a Page 1 article in the June 29 issue of The Wall Street Journal. She started a support group at Vanderbilt and hopes to eventually start one in Bowling Green. She is enjoying life traveling with her daughters, although their activities have scaled back a little.
We eat a lot healthier, Alyson said.
They worry about some of their friends, too, Emily said.
I have a lot of friends who smoke, and its scary, she said.
Additionally, Kentucky leads the nation in lung cancer deaths, Monroe said, and a visit to Frankfort to meet with then-Gov. Paul Patton last year right before Lung Cancer Awareness Month in November didnt allay their fears.
There were ashtrays all over and No Smoking signs, Alyson said.
But people were still smoking. Monroe then talked to Patton about promoting Lung Cancer Awareness Month for Kentucky.
He said, We have to protect the tobacco farmers, she said. I wasnt there to talk about tobacco. Its all about economics.
But Monroe isnt bitter about her bout with lung cancer.
You get over the pain, but you dont get over having cancer, she said. You let that go unchecked and it will kill you.
In fact, the dark-haired woman, sitting on a couch in her home with bare feet tucked under her, looks happy and healthy. She is living cancer-free once again.
I dont think Im at 100 percent, but Im OK, she said. Im feeling very healthy. Im still feeling good.
Emily agreed.
Just look at her, she said, smiling at her mother. She went skiing when she was on chemotherapy.
sidebar
The Wendy D. Wyrick Foundation will have a 5K Lung Run at 8 a.m. Aug. 14 at Keeneland Race Track in Lexington.
The new non-profit organization was founded in memory of Wyrick, a Bowling Green woman who lost her battle with lung cancer at age 32. The foundation is devoted to raising awareness, educating the public and funding the research for treatment and cures for lung cancer.
For more information about the foundation or the race, call Tami Dobbins at (859) 420-2030.
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