Testimonials
"Living life cancer free, 11 years after being diagnosed with SCLC."
David Hanbidge
(Small Cell Lung Cancer)
My name is David Hanbidge. I was diagnosed at 57 years old
and I am proud to say that I am reaching the 11 year mark in
my journey to be cured of small cell lung cancer. Here is
my story:
I first noticed that something was wrong in
the spring of 1999. I was having trouble breathing without wheezing
and coughing. Initially, I just attributed my symptoms to my
yearly allergy condition and thought nothing more of it. After
a few months, I started coughing up traces of blood and decided
to see my doctor. X-rays didn't show anything unusual but the
doctor thought I might have had pneumonia recently. When the
condition just persisted and the traces of blood became more
apparent, I went to see a pulmonary specialist, Dr. Cameron Dick.
He performed a bronchoscope procedure on my lungs and discovered
evidence of cancerous cells. I'll never forget the day when the
doctor took my wife and me to a small back office and told us
the horrible news…I had the very worst kind of lung cancer -
small cell lung cancer. I remember Dr. Dick had tears in his
eyes when he told us the news. He had to tell us that the outlook
of surviving this kind of cancer was very bleak. The news stunned
us - nothing really prepares you to get this kind of death sentence.
The doctor told us that I needed to get under
the care of an oncologist immediately and told us about a special
one named Dr. Robert Nagourney, who practiced locally in Long
Beach. He told us that he had a reputation of being a bit of
a renegade in the way he treated cancer - using non-traditional
approaches and chemotherapy medicines. However, he was earning
some notoriety for the positive results that he was achieving.
Dr. Dick told us that if he or his father were in the situation
that I found myself in, that he would choose Dr. Nagourney for
his physician. I'll never forget that we were so shaken by the
news that we had just heard that neither my wife nor I could
even enter Dr. Nagourney's phone number in my cell phone. Dr.
Dick observed our shock and offered to make the call for us.
We overheard him speaking on my behalf to Dr. Nagourney, persuading
him to add a very difficult case to his already heavy patient
load. My wife and I were praying in the next room that Dr. Nagourney
would see me.
One of the luckiest days of my life was when
Dr. Nagourney agreed to meet with me. He explained the basis
for his approach to treating cancer was to obtain a sample of
the cancerous tissue and test a wide variety of chemo medicines
against it. The chemo(s) that responded the best to eliminating
the cancer were then to be used to battle it. I was scheduled
for surgery to obtain the tissue sample immediately. My cancer
seemed to be isolated in one area of the lower left lobe of my
lung, so the surgeon decided to remove the whole area. Dr. Nagourney's
tissue testing resulted in some good news - my cancer tissue
was apparently very sensitive to most types of chemo. Given this
encouraging information that he had a wide range of chemo's to
choose from, and knowing that I would undergo anything to stop
this cancer, Dr. Nagourney went to work defining an aggressive
treatment plan for me. We ended up with eleven sessions of chemo
for five days at a stretch, three weeks apart. He also arranged
for radiation twice a day for 30 days. The final component to
my treatment plan was brain radiation to help eliminate the chance
of the cancer spreading to my brain.
On a personal level, I embraced my cancer treatment
like a life raft. Dr. Nagourney's philosophy that our cancer-afflicted
tissue’s ability to fight cancer is almost as unique as our fingerprints
rang so true. It makes sense that there is no "one size fits
all" approach to cancer treatment. The success lies in matching
the most formidable chemo against a particular cancer tissue.
That fact was especially proved when it was determined that the
application of chemos traditionally used to fight breast cancers
and brain cancers were among the best weapons to fight my lung
cancer.
I did lose my hair twice and experienced some nausea and weakness during
treatments. But all the way through I maintained confidence in my doctor and
hope for a cure, I prayed and took long walks in the nature center most days
and was constantly reminded of how precious life and good health is. After 10 years
of remission I am happy to report that I am cured of my cancer. To celebrate the end
of my treatments, my wife and I took a life's dream vacation to New Zealand. While there,
I decided to paraglide from a 1,000-foot mountain. Was I afraid? Not nearly as much as
I was when I first leaned of my diagnosis. I hate to think how my life may have turned out
differently had I not met Dr. Nagourney. I am encouraged for other people's chances of success
in battling cancer when I hear how my doctor's philosophy of treatment is becoming more
accepted and practiced by other oncologists. I am convinced, without a doubt, that I wouldn't
be here today if that philosophy hadn't been practiced in my life.
