Houston Chronicle Sunday

4 times the ‘adventure’

Texas mom gives birth to quadruplet­s just weeks after seizure-inducing brain tumor was removed

- By Catherine Marfin

Katie Sturm was just three months pregnant when she suffered a seizure at work.

At UT Southweste­rn, she found out she had a glioma, a type of tumor in the brain and spinal cord that can be life-threatenin­g.

Doctors would have preferred to remove the tumor quickly, but they were worried about the effects a major surgery might have on Sturm and her unborn babies — all four of them.

“When I found out I was having quadruplet­s, I straight up cried for like two days,” Sturm, who is now 27, said Tuesday at a news conference with her family and the medical team.

Sturm conceived her quads naturally, which doctors say occurs only once in every 700,000 births. She’d just gotten over the shock of the news about her pregnancy when she had the seizure.

“When I found out I had the brain tumor, it was just kind of so surreal. It was hard to believe,” she said.

The tumor looked as though it was growing slowly, so doctors planned to wait to operate until after her children were born.

“But Katie’s tumor had other ideas,” said Dr. Toral Patel, Katie’s doctor and an assistant professor of neurologic­al surgery at UT Southweste­rn. Two weeks later, she suffered another seizure in her home.

“We had to basically throw the initial plan out the window,” said her husband, 33-year-old Chris Sturm. “When I saw the second one myself, it became a real thing. It was one of those moments where the possibilit­y that something could happen to my wife and my kids is very prevalent and very real.”

He said they were in the hospital for Katie’s surgery on the day Dallas County announced its shelter-in-place order.

Also, the couple were in the process of finding a new house to accommodat­e their children — the four boys on the way as well as their 3-year-old son, Ryan. The family now lives in Haslet, north of Fort Worth.

“This whole year has just been a lot of changes,” Chris Sturm said. “I don’t know how to really describe it other than the giant ball of anxiety.”

Katie Sturm and her children didn’t have complicati­ons from the surgery, which took place during her second trimester. She recovered at home during lockdown orders, and on July 3, she gave birth to Austin, Daniel, Jacob and Hudson.

The C-section delivery was performed 32 weeks into her pregnancy by a 21-member team. It was the first set of quadruplet­s ever born at UT Southweste­rn’s William P. Clements Jr. University Hospital, said Dr. Becky Ennis, associate professor in pediatrics and the medical director of the hospital’s neonatal intensive-care unit.

“We assigned every baby a color, and we assigned their rooms early on,” she said. “All the medication­s, all the equipment were being stored in their color-coded rooms. And on the day of delivery, we were color coded as well.

“The head of each team had a surgical cap on that was color coded and had the baby’s letter on it — baby A, B, C and D — so if you looked around the room, you could tell which physician or nurse practition­er was in charge of which baby.”

The boys remained in neonatal intensive care while they gained weight, learned how to feed from a bottle and improved their breathing. Austin and Jacob stayed for a month, Daniel went home about a week and a half later and Hudson was cared for almost two months before going home, Ennis said.

“They weighed between 3 and 5 pounds each at birth, which is just amazing and more than we could have ever hoped for when we were first talking about the boys coming several weeks before they were due,” she said.

It’s possible Katie Sturm’s tumor could recur, but Patel said she’s optimistic and commended her for the way she handled so many challenges during her pregnancy.

“The intersecti­on of natural quadruplet­s and a glioma in a single human, all during the course of pregnancy, I’m quite certain has never happened on this planet before and may never happen again,” she said. “To say that Katie is a unique, strong woman is an understate­ment.”

The couple say they feel extremely lucky despite all the difficulti­es.

“There’s not an instructio­n manual for quadruplet­s. There’s no book that says, ‘This is how you do this.’ It’s just kind of, ‘Here are babies,’” Chris Sturm said. “It’s been a fun and exceptiona­lly challengin­g adventure to say the least.”

 ?? UT Southweste­rn ?? Big brother Ryan Sturm, 3, watches over his siblings at their home in Haslet. His mother, Katie Sturm, had surgery to remove a brain tumor and delivered quadruplet­s just 18 weeks later on July 3.
UT Southweste­rn Big brother Ryan Sturm, 3, watches over his siblings at their home in Haslet. His mother, Katie Sturm, had surgery to remove a brain tumor and delivered quadruplet­s just 18 weeks later on July 3.

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