Ottawa Sun

Funds for the fight

Hooper raises $500Gs for cancer research

- ANDREW DUFFY

An Ottawa woman has raised more than $500,000 for cancer research at The Ottawa Hospital during the decade she has lived with pancreatic cancer.

Sindy Hooper has led fundraisin­g teams at Tamarack Ottawa Race Weekend every year since she was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in early 2013.

Those teams, the MEMC crew and Marathoner­s Gone Viral, recently topped the half-million-dollar milestone.

Hooper, a former marathon runner and Ironman competitor, was honoured Tuesday evening by officials with Tamarack Ottawa Race Weekend, who are celebratin­g 50 people who have had a significan­t impact on this city's running community during the past 50 years.

Karie Ford, marketing co-ordinator for Run Ottawa, said Hooper was being recognized “because of her commitment to her community and her inspiring story of perseveran­ce and positivity against the odds.”

Hooper called the fundraisin­g milestone “a huge accomplish­ment.”

“Just having my friends and family continue to support me in this cause over the last 10 years is just so incredible,” she said in an interview. “It's a very nice feeling to know we've done that.”

The 115 people who are this year part of Hooper's Make Every Moment Count (MEMC) team have already raised more than $55,000.

Hooper, who has been living with Stage 4 pancreatic cancer since September 2022, will be walking the 5k on race weekend with the goal of finishing inside an hour.

She managed to join a U.S. clinical trial in January, and the treatment it offers has kept her cancer in check.

The clinical trial is testing the safety and clinical activity of RMC6236,

a targeted therapy designed to treat patients with advanced pancreatic cancer that's driven by a mutated KRAS gene.

Hooper has this altered form of the gene, which is responsibl­e for most pancreatic cancers.

“I'm doing OK,” Hooper said. “I've had no progressio­n of my disease since September, no new metastases, so that's really great.”

Hooper suffers from repeated fluid buildup in her left lung and must have it drained every three days.

The condition largely prevents her from taking part in the long-distance sports that have been at the centre of her life for decades: running, swimming and biking.

“I wish I could swim,” she said. “I'd really love to be able to get into Meech Lake this summer. I really miss the long swims in Meech.”

Hooper was training for an Ironman in December 2012 when she began to experience pain in her back and abdomen. Her skin was itchy and she felt unusually tired.

An ultrasound revealed a tumour in her pancreas. Those diagnosed with pancreatic cancer survive an average of six months since the disease is usually advanced by the time it's discovered.

 ?? JEAN LEVAC ?? Sindy Hooper, who has lived with pancreatic cancer for the past 10 years, is being honoured by Tamarack Ottawa Race Weeekend for raising more than $500,000 for cancer research at The Ottawa Hospital.
JEAN LEVAC Sindy Hooper, who has lived with pancreatic cancer for the past 10 years, is being honoured by Tamarack Ottawa Race Weeekend for raising more than $500,000 for cancer research at The Ottawa Hospital.

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