Tuesday, March 3, 2015

#141 "Trying to Stay Alive on Two Percent"

Don't ignore Stage IV!  That's the appeal blasting from the twitter accounts tagging #metsmonday to raise awareness and the lack of funds for the mets clan.  I am a day late posting this but the rally cry is still loud and clear.  Ms. Corneliussen-James has the statistics and a well written outline on what should be done to help the 30% of us who have moved to the next level of this disease.  

Trying to Stay Alive on Two Percent
by CJ (Dian) Corneliussen-James, President, METAvivor Research and Support, Inc.


My interest in the allocation of cancer research funds began January 13, 2007 ... the day I learned that only 1% of the $5 billion annual cancer fund was devoted to any stage IV cancer, despite the fact that stage IV causes 90% of cancer deaths.  I had just been diagnosed with metastatic (stage IV) breast cancer, or "BC mets" as we tend to call it, so the statement really hit home.

The stage IV research fund allocation is now considered closer to 2%, but that is still minuscule and breast cancer is a subset of that.  One might think breast cancer organizations would look after their own stage IV community.  They do not.  The vast majority of their funds go into prevention and early detection.  Their few so-called metastatic breast cancer research grants are often aimed at preventing breast cancer from metastasizing, not at finding solutions for those already at stage IV.  For this reason all the millions poured into the disease have done nothing to change the fact each year 73,000 - 86,000 Americans are diagnosed with terminal breast cancer and close to 41,000 die of the disease.

These and other facts are not well known.  The media, cancer organizations and drug companies prefer not to recognize our existence except to highlight an individual now and then as a stellar example of positivity and health despite their disease -- hardly the typical person with stage IV breast cancer.

The only ones trying to rectify this situation are non-profit organizations run by patients, working out of their homes as volunteers, dependent upon hard-to-get donations and grants and trying to get someone outside the metastatic breast cancer community to listen.  How many non-profits are doing this?  I know of only two.  METAvivor Research and Support, Inc , of which I am President, and Metastatic Breast Cancer Network, directed by Ellen Moskowitz.  Upon meeting Ellen in 2008, we quickly agreed that any duplication of effort was a complete waste of time, energy and money.  So we work as complimentary organizations with METAvivor targeting research, support and awareness and MBCN targeting advocacy.  We lend each other support, encouragement, advice and friendship.  Progress has been slow, but we have made some headway.

METAvivor awarded its first research grant in January 2010 and we are very pleased with the results. We could do a lot more with an increase in donations, but we work hard to put our small grants to good use.  METAvivor is willing to fund the out-of-the-box ideas ... the ideas others will not touch.  We do this in the hope that at the end of the year the results can be placed in a nice, neat package that appeals to the "big bucks" organizations, which will hopefully pick up these projects and fund them to completion.  METAvivor also promises something promised by no one else.  We put 100% of every research-designated donation into our research grant because what we want more than anything is a solution that will allow all stage IV patients to live without the constant knowledge that each year could easily be their last.

Why are other organizations not funding stage IV research?  Here are my thoughts:

1. Image and Turn-Around:  Grant-givers prefer projects of short duration with a relative certainty of success.  That is good for the image and encourages future donations.  Mets research is enormously complex and the best chances for significant improvement tend to be out of the box ideas. Such research takes longer to accomplish and the predictability of success is shaky.

2. They are Getting Away with It.  Cancer organizations have used token advances to claim they are making great strides forward with metastatic cancer.  The advances they speak of are rare and normally involve extending life at best for several weeks or months, but this is not made public.  Even those who know the truth keep giving, including some of those dying of the disease.  They are caught up by the glamour, the big names and the enticing events.   There is no need to take the difficult road.

3. Money .. Money .. Money.  Metastatic cancer research is enormously expensive, especially if sufficient models (animal or otherwise), which are critical to much of the research, are to be developed.

What would METAvivor do if money were not an issue?  No question there.  We would convene a conference and bring together the world's premier, career metastasis researchers to develop a 20-year collaborative plan aimed at eradicating death from stage IV breast cancer.  We know this is possible .. we need only the funding.

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Brief Biography:
After spending 24 years as an Air Force Intelligence Officer, "CJ" (Dian) Corneliussen-James, retired as a Lieutenant Colonel and took a Senior Analyst position in the Defense of Defense.  Slowed down by the diagnoses of both metastatic breast cancer and systemic lupus in 2006, she retired from the government but was soon busy running a support program for metastatic breast cancer.  Her quest to fund much needed research for the disease led to the establishment of a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, METAvivor Research and Support Inc., of which she is President.   CJ lives in Annapolis, MD.

Thanks for reading # 141 of 7777.

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