“My first thought was, ‘No!’ I was not going to do that again,” said Treffert. She had developed Graves’ disease, an autoimmune disorder that results in an overactive thyroid, as a result of her initial treatment. This ruled out most cancer therapy options. “Proton therapy was basically my only option, for which I will be forever grateful. I had no side effects whatsoever with protons.”
Though she has a few lingering side effects to her immune system from her Graves’ disease, for the most part she is feeling better all the time.
Cancer is ‘not the center of my world’
The same is true for Dawn Thomas, who was originally diagnosed with lung cancer in 2017 and received proton therapy to treat a recurrence in 2020.
“I feel great,” said Thomas. “I never felt bad through protons and immunotherapy at Fred Hutch. I stay active and follow Ruth Bader Ginsberg’s philosophy: it’s not the center of my world.”
In 2017, Thomas went in for what she thought was a mild case of pneumonia, but her primary care physician insisted on ordering an MRI, where a tumor was discovered. Thomas had surgery and went on active surveillance, but eventually she was referred for proton therapy because the tumors were right in the center of her chest, near her heart and esophagus.
“I absolutely feel that protons made a difference in how I feel today,” said Thomas. “It zeroed in on the cancer without affecting other organs nearly as much as traditional radiation might have.”