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Bruce is
Blood Cancer United

Bruce, cancer survivor, standing outdoors and smiling

I was diagnosed with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) in August 2019 at age 64. It was an accidental find while scanning for a kidney stone. I was late stage 3 at diagnosis with no prior symptoms. I had 4 rounds of treatment finishing at the end of 2019 and followed with an autologous stem cell transplant at the University of Virginia on February 24, 2020.

Along the way, I had a life-threatening duodenal ulcer (Oscar) as a result of the treatment. A stem cell transplant resulted in several infections including a relatively rare lung infection that took 6 months to treat and resolve, C-diff, and other lung and gastric infections. I have generally responded well to the treatment and a year out I am just beginning my re-immunizations and envisioning some normalcy returning.

The nature of mantle cell lymphoma is that it commonly recurs, so I know that I need to stay "plugged in" to the cancer network and the rapidly advancing treatments. The greatest likelihood is that I will have a number of years of remission to enjoy the good life. It is a different life in retirement than I had imagined but certainly manageable after the enormity of what I've been through. I am here to be a resource and to hear how others navigate through living with cancer.

Throughout the stressful days of my lymphoma treatment, I never had a moment’s pause that being a gay man would negatively impact my care. No LGBTQIA patient, or their loved ones, should ever be exposed to that additional stress and fear.

Bruce

mantle cell lymphoma (MCL)

We are Blood Cancer United.

Everyone affected by blood cancer—patients, survivors, caregivers, researchers, advocates, fundraisers, everyone—has a story. Share yours.

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The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) is now Blood Cancer United. Learn more.