133: Joe Brennan survived Testicular Cancer | Orchiectomy | Spermatocele | Epididymis
Release Date: 01/07/2025
Cancer 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_outlineCancer Interviews
Noelle Gatlin had to endure a lengthy, multi-step process, but she survived Stage II pancreatic cancer. A visit to an emergency department revealed a mass near her pancreas. She was transferred to a hospital, where a second CT scan resulted in her diagnosis. Her care team placed a duodenal stent in Noelle, then a bile duct stent. She next underwent a 12-infusion chemotherapy regimen with folfirinox. Then she was ready for a Whipple procedure, a pancreatic duodenectomy, which was a success. Noelle says because she took care of herself before,...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
Laurie Adami seemed to have it all. She was the president of her company, at age 40, she had just had a son and still found time to lead an active lifestyle. However, in 2003, her health took a turn for the worse. She felt a lump in her abdomen, experienced frequent, lengthy sinus infections and chronic fatigue. All this led to a diagnosis of Stage IV Follicular Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. After six unsuccessful treatment regimens, she achieved complete remission on the seventh try, completing a battle that ran twelve years. When Laurie initially brought her...
info_outlineCancer Interviews
Nicole Scott and her husband, Keith, worked at the same Ohio hospital. When Keith noticed abdominal pain in his left side, he thought it was muscle-related because of the physical nature of his job. The pain radiated to his groin, then what had been random occurrences of the pain became more frequent. Nicole urged Keith to seek urgent care. An emergency room doctor called for a CT scan, thinking Keith had at worst, a hernia. However, the CT scan revealed a mass on Keith’s kidney. An MRI and partial nephrectomy resulted in a diagnosis of papillary renal...
info_outlineOn today’s @CancerInterviews podcast, Joe Brennan tells us how he survived testicular cancer. He says in April 2024, he noticed his right testicle was unusually hard, and immediately sought medical attention. His urologist called for an ultrasound, which revealed a cyst on the testicle, which led to a diagnosis of seminoma pT1a, or Stage One testicular cancer. That led to an orchiectomy, a surgical procedure that removed his right testicle and his spermatic cord. Joe said recovery from the surgery was much tougher than the procedure itself, but after two weeks he was back at work as a financial coach. He says these days his health is back to what it was before his diagnosis.
Joe was in the shower one day when he noticed that while his left testicle felt normal, the right testicle was hard, “like a baseball.” He didn’t waste time and scheduled an appointment with a urologist, who made a fist and said a normal testicle will feel like the ‘meat’ part, or soft part of the hand; but said if a testicle has that sort of hardness, like a knuckle, that should be a cause for concern. When the urologist determined Joe’s right testicle had that hardness, he said an ultrasound should be performed on Joe’s testicles. It showed a cyst on the right testicle, the urologist said cancer was likely indicated, and he was right.
The necessary procedure was an orchiectomy, which was surgery aimed at removing the cancerous testicle and Joe’s spermatic cord. Joe said he was under a general anesthetic for the two-hour procedure, which was a success. However, he said what followed was much more difficult. He thought he would be back at work as a financial coach in a day or two, but that wasn’t the case.
Joe Brennan said he was laid up for close to two weeks. He said he experienced a lot of pain “down there.” He had trouble walking, couldn’t do any heavy lifting and needed to take Vicodin for a couple days before switching to ibuprofen. He was eventually able to return to work, could walk normally and could play with his small children, which included picking them up.
Joe says those two weeks were tough. He said he would allow himself an hour each day to be sad, which sometimes involved breaking down in tears, as he still wasn’t certain about his recovery, but other than that hour, he wanted to be positive and upbeat for his wife and children.
Joe Brennan says he is doing fine but advises men to “check their balls” once a month, so that if anything is wrong, the prospect of testicular cancer can be detected and addressed at an early stage, as his was.
Additional Resources:
The Testicular Cancer Society: https://www.testicularcancersociety.org
Joe on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jsbrennan/
Joe on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/official.jsbrennan