Weekend Herald

Don’t ever give up, survivor of rare cancer tells other sufferers

- Sarah Harris

A man who had tumours so big they broke his collarbone has been cleared of a rare cancer after an historic medical trial.

Now his wife, who had breast cancer at the same time, is releasing a book on Monday about their journey to help people struggling through cancer.

Russell Bishop and his wife, Rowan, had their healthy, active lives turned upside down after Bishop was diagnosed with double- hit lymphoma, a mutation of two rare and highly aggressive cancers which can resist traditiona­l chemothera­py.

“It was devastatin­g, it just stunned us really,” the Hamilton man said.

“I found out later a tumour had broken my collarbone and I hadn’t even noticed it there was so much pain in my back.”

The 66- year- olds were holidaying in France three years ago when Bishop first felt some back pain. Within three weeks he was under the knife to stop a tumour from piercing his spinal cord and paralysing him.

Bishop said in hindsight he missed some key warning signs of cancer like night sweats, pain and losing concentrat­ion. Cancer never sprang to mind as he had been fully checked in April, but by September 2013 he had a “raging bunch of tumours” in his back.

The Waikato University professor started treatment with a month- long aggressive chemothera­py course.

But the worst part was that the treatment hadn’t worked.

Another treatment would have killed Bishop so his haematolog­ist poured over academic journals to find an alternativ­e way to treat the diseasewhi­ch had only been discovered in 2010 — there wasn’t much written on DHL. But luckily his doctor found one medical trial that had worked on five cases. “So I became No 6.” The trial involved the same chemothera­py chemicals but administer­ed over 96 hours. This way it didn’t give the cancer a chance to mutate between doses of chemothera­py.

In the meantime Rowan, who had been caring for Bishop, was diagnosed with a raft of health problems including breast cancer. The double diagnosis is where they drew inspiratio­n for the book’s title — Double Whammy: A Story About Beating an ‘ Unbeatable’ Cancer.

On May 29, 2014, eight months after Bishop was diagnosed, the couple were both declared in remission. Bishop was told he was in the clear two hours after Rowan heard from her doctor.

“We both jumped up and down like crazy.

“It was almost as unbelievab­le as getting the cancer in the first place,” Bishop said.

Bishop’s treatment has become a part of medical history. His medical trial has gone on to raise survival statistics from under 20 per cent to over 80 per cent.

Bishop’s biggest message to cancer sufferers is “don’t give up”.

“I never thought I was going to die. Even though intellectu­ally I knew things weren’t too great.

“I always had hope and faith something was going to happen, and it did.

“I’m very fond of life.”

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 ?? Picture / Alan Gibson ?? Dr Russell Bishop, right, and his wife, Rowan Bishop.
Picture / Alan Gibson Dr Russell Bishop, right, and his wife, Rowan Bishop.

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