132: Samina Cepal survived cervical cancer | cisplatin | brachytherapy | pap smear | chemotherapy
Release Date: 12/12/2024
Cancer Interviews
Marcel D'Allende was in outstanding health, an avid hiker in the mountains overlooking her hometown of Cape Town, South Africa. However, in October 2021, she began to experience shortness of breath and extreme fatigue. That led to a diagnosis of Stage IV non-small cell adenocarcinoma, or lung cancer. Determined not to let cancer define her, she underwent a treatment regimen of radiotherapy, then chemotherapy with carboplatin and pemetrexed, and immunotherapy with durvalumab. In September 2022, a PET scan revealed Marcel was cancer-free. It took a little while for...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
In November 2019, Margo Wickersham noticed blood in her urine. Three months later, she was diagnosed with two types of bladder cancer. After an aggressive chemotherapy regimen, she underwent a radical cystectomy and a hysterectomy in June 2020, resulting in the removal of her bladder, uterus and ovaries, all this during the quarantine phase of the COVID pandemic. Ever since, Margo has been cancer-free, but she had to get fitted with a stoma bag and had to learn how to manage it. The bag is an annoyance, but she considers it a small price to pay in order to stay...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
When she began experiencing severe bruising and fatigue and turning pale in late 2013, Casey Kang sought medical attention. This led to a diagnosis of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. She was placed on an aggressive, 18-month chemotherapy regimen, which included doxorubicin and methotrexate. Casey relapsed three times during which she was placed on an experimental immunotherapy. All told, she spent 168 days in a hospital, but Casey achieved survivorship. She is now a coach who helps women diagnosed with cancer through the physical, mental and emotional...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
Stacy Martin says genetic testing saved her life. The testing indicated she had the CDH1 mutation. The mutation gave her an 80 percent chance of getting gastric cancer and a 60 percent chance of breast cancer. She opted for a prophylactic total gastrectomy to remove her stomach and addressed the possibility of breast cancer with a bilateral mastectomy. Without a stomach, Stacy has had to change the way she eats, requiring food every two hours, and having to completely chew everything she eats. Despite this live-changing surgery, Stacy is leading a healthy...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
In 2019, Jonathan Gegerson sought medical attention went he felt a lump on the right side of his neck. After a couple of scans and a biopsy, he was diagnosed with salivary duct carcinoma, a rare form of head and neck cancer. Jonathan survived, but not before enduring 67 sessions of radiation, 12 cycles of chemotherapy (carboplatin, taxol, herceptin) and seven surgeries. He still undergoes a targeted therapy on a monthly basis, and the surgery has affected his speech and his diet, but Jonathan has resumed an active lifestyle that includes skiing and hiking. Jonathan...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
It took two chemotherapy regimens, but Luke Mutter survived a rare form of bile duct cancer. A CT scan found a 14cm tumor in his liver. At that time, his care team told him he had cancer, but it could not identify the type of cancer. He was put on a systemic chemotherapy cocktail of folfirinox and oxaplatin, which attempt to kill the tumor. When that didn’t work, Luke learned he was a candidate for a hepatic artery infusion, which included chemo far stronger than his first regimen. Luke has achieved survivorship and is very thankful to be to lead a healthy...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
It was a stressful journey, but Linda Trummer survived Stage IV mantle cell lymphoma. In 2015, she went to her primary care physician after discovering a lump on her jaw line. That led to a diagnosis of a slow-moving blood cancer, MALtoma. However, further tests revealed a lump under her left arm and the diagnosis was upgraded to Stage IV mantle cell lymphoma, a rare form of blood cancer. She underwent R-Hyper-CVAD, a multi-faceted chemotherapy regimen and just two months later was declared to have No Evidence of Disease. Linda still suffers from the many side...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
In 2021, one day away from his fortieth birthday, Ty Cedars felt pain in one of his testicles and noticed it was enlarged. He contacted his physician, asking to be seen. The following day, en route to a birthday celebration, Ty received a call from his doctor, requesting that Ty come right away. The Alexandria, Louisiana-based schoolteacher soon underwent an ultrasound, then was directed to a urologist, who told Ty that he had testicular cancer. He took the news calmly and was told by the doctor that this was a very treatable cancer, but that he would have to go on a...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
A clinical exercise physiologist by trade, Erin Bloodworth sought a career change and became an exercise oncologist. This enabled her to take her expertise and apply it to helping cancer patients, which she does through Northwestern Medicine Living Well. Erin says whether a patient is going through cancer treatment or is post-treatment, she puts the patient through an individualized exercise program. She assesses the patient's health with tests tied to their ability to grip objects and go from a sitting position to a standing position and...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
For Stewart Greenfield, the third time was the charm. After checking pictures of his bladder in 2016, two doctors told him he didn’t have long to live; a third doctor told him he had Stage IV metastatic bladder cancer, but insisted he needed to be treated. The cancer had burned a hole in his bladder and attacked lymph nodes from his groin to his neck. Treatment included a chemotherapy cocktail of cisplatin and gemcidibine, plus qualifying for an immunotherapy, novolumab. It was a smashing success. Stewart says his urinary function is normal and he is able to...
info_outlineIn late 2018, Samina Cepal went in for her routine pap smear, but her visit turned out to be anything but routine. It led to a CT scan, a pelvic ultrasound and a diagnosis of cervical cancer. Samina underwent a grueling regimen of chemotherapy (cisplatin) and radiation therapy, simultaneously. She experienced acute fatigue, weight loss, hair loss and despair, but three months later, her doctor said she had no evidence of disease. These days, Samina can exercise, which includes vigorous use of a hula hoop, and has regained her appetite and her pre-diagnosis weight.
Samina Cepal referred to her annual pre-Christmas pap smear as her gift to herself. She had never experienced anything abnormal with any of her previous pap smears, and had every reason to think this visit would be no different. However, when the nurse noticed bleeding, she wanted Samina to be seen by a doctor. The doctor ordered a pelvic ultrasound and said it appeared Samina had cancer. A subsequent biopsy revealed she had Stage 3B cervical cancer.
In early 2019, Samina began a regimen of chemotherapy, which morphed into a simultaneous regimen of chemotherapy and 28 doses of radiation therapy. While Samina now makes her home in Birmingham, United Kingdom, at the time she was living in her native island of St. Lucia. Limited resources forced phases of her treatment to take place in Martinique and Guyana.
Her treatment regimen concluded with brachytherapy, which included painful insertion into her vagina. Samina barely had any energy but was determined to survive because she wanted to be there for her two teenage sons.
Three months from the time she was diagnosed, she was stunned to hear from her doctor that there was no longer any evidence of disease. Samina had little strength, but she found a way to fly home to St. Lucia, in time to be present at a celebration of her son’s eighteenth birthday.
Samina is amazed when she thinks of how much she has overcome to return to almost the same level of health she enjoyed prior to her diagnosis. She enjoys long walks, gets to workout and exercise, and really enjoys using her hula hoop.
Additional Resources:
Cervivor: https:www.cervivor.org