Tamara Taggart: Cancer cover girl

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Tamara Taggart: Cancer cover girl

Postby radiofan » Sat Jan 25, 2014 9:31 am

Tamara Taggart: Cancer cover girl

CTV news anchor shares her story for debut issue of magazine for cancer survivors

BY PAMELA FAYERMAN, VANCOUVER SUN JANUARY 24, 2014


Image

CTV anchor Tamara Taggart opens up about her battle with a rare form of gastrointestinal cancer which is now in remission,
thanks to successful surgery which removed a huge tumour from her small intestines and a fairly new costly drug supplied by
the BC Cancer Agency. Photo courtesy Kyrani Kanavaros/Klik Photographic


Tamara Taggart is the cover girl for a B.C. magazine that debuted this month.

The CTV news anchor wishes the BC Cancer Foundation hadn’t had a reason to request her story for the first issue of Forward, its patient empowerment publication. But as a cancer survivor who’s just passed the second anniversary of a brush with death, she couldn’t say no.

“I can definitely say it’s not the magazine cover I dreamed I’d be on. I hesitated, initially, because just even saying the word cancer is still hard for me. Not many people know I’ve even gone through this experience,” she said in an interview.

Taggart, 45, had a rare gastrointestinal stromal tumour, commonly called GIST in the medical community.

Since the tumour was removed, she’s been taking a drug that has revolutionized the care of patients like her. If she’d developed the cancer more than a decade ago — before the arrival of drugs known as targeted biologic therapies — her doctors told her she’d be dead.

For several months in 2011, before the cancer was diagnosed, Taggart had its common symptoms: fatigue and anemia. But doctors didn’t discover the source of her problem until the fist-sized tumour adhered to her small intestines ruptured. She nearly bled to death.

The day it burst, in January 2012, she had the worst headache of her life. She vomited and passed out in the bathroom at work, on a day she was meant to be celebrating the first anniversary of her start as Mike Killeen’s co-anchor on the 6 p.m. news. She went home. Her husband would later call an ambulance.

The tumour had been growing inside Taggart for about two years. It was originally missed by a radiologist after a CT scan that she had for kidney stones.

Despite the delay in a diagnosis and the missed diagnosis by the radiologist — who has apologized — Taggart’s not bitter.

“I was upset for 24 hours when I learned the tumour was visible on a scan I had in 2010. When I met the radiologist again, I told him ‘I need you to know that I hated you for 24 hours.’ But he was looking at my kidneys for kidney stones. Only when he was asked to go back and look at the scan again did he see a tumour in my small intestines.

“I wished he would have seen it initially, but I also wished none of this had ever happened. But it did, and now I want other patients to be aware that when something doesn’t feel right in their bodies, we have to be our own best advocates.”

Fortunately, one of the world’s leading experts on gastrointestinal stromal tumours, Dr. Charles Blanke, was at the BC Cancer Agency when Taggart was taken to Vancouver General Hospital. He has since moved to Portland, Oregon, but Taggart still emails him with questions and she’s confident in her new oncologist.

Blanke pioneered the research and use of a life-saving drug called Gleevec for gastrointestinal stromal tumour patients. Taggart is on the generic version now, but when she was she was first prescribed the daily medication, it cost $6,000 a month. It was paid for by the cancer agency.

“People like to complain about the health care system, and it’s not perfect, but boy, when you need it for something so urgent, it’s there. And the medical and nursing care is unbelievable,” says Taggart.

Studies have shown that half of patients with large tumours like Taggart’s will develop another one if they don’t take the drug after surgery. Taking the drug cuts chances of that to 25 per cent. Taggart says she expects to be on the drug for three years and, depending on results of still-to-be published research, perhaps as long as five years.

Followup care involves blood tests every three months and a CT scan every six months.

Like most cancer survivors, Taggart has bleak days, especially when she worries about her young children, ages three, five and six. Her oldest has Down syndrome.

“The idea of not being there for them was more than I could ever fathom,” she says, adding she’s happy her children are so far oblivious to her cancer experience. Taggart says she and her husband, Dave Genn, of 54-40 rock band fame, will tell them details of her near-death experience when they’re older.

For now, she’s sticking to telling them bedtime stories — about fairies, fantasies and innocent adventures that never once mention the “C” word.

And although she was hesitant about becoming a cover girl for Forward magazine, she’s glad she did it. Telling her story proved therapeutic.

“It takes the weight of the world off your shoulders when you share common experiences, including those about cancer.”

Sun Health Issues Reporter

pfayerman@vancouversun.com

http://www.vancouversun.com/health/Tama ... story.html
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