Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Oncologist dies at 72

Vogelzang is hailed as cancer patient advocate

- By Brett Clarkson Contact Brett Clarkson at bclarkson@reviewjour­nal.com or 561-324-6421. Follow @Brettclark­son_ on Twitter.

Dr. Nicholas J. Vogelzang, a globally renowned Las Vegas oncologist whose generous bedside manner and habit of giving out his personal cellphone number to patients made him beloved by those in his care, has died.

He was 72.

Vogelzang’s death was announced Wednesday by the southern Nevada-based Comprehens­ive Cancer Centers, where he was the chairman of medical oncology. He died Tuesday. No cause of death was provided.

“Dr. Vogelzang was a beloved leader in oncology, Las Vegas and in the hearts of every single person he touched in his profession­al endeavors,” Jon Bilstein, Comprehens­ive’s executive director, said in a statement.

Storied medical career

The announceme­nt from Comprehens­ive Cancer Centers noted Vogelzang’s many achievemen­ts, which included his leading efforts to bring a “promising new therapy for those with advanced stage prostate cancer known as 177LU-PSMA-617 to Las Vegas,” with one of his patients becoming the first in Nevada to get the treatment, among other benchmarks in a long and storied medical career.

In a 2017 column by former Review-journalist columnist Paul Harasim, a panic-stricken patient of Dr. Vogelzang called Harasim to ask if the rumors of Vogelzang’s impending retirement were true. Harasim asked Vogelzang, who laughed at the suggestion and said he hoped to be seeing patients for another 50 years. “Thank God,” the patient said, weeping.

‘He really cares’

In the same column, another grateful patient remembered Vogelzang calling her at 10 p.m. one night to let her know that a new drug could treat her rare Stage 4 lung cancer. Other patients and their family members also said the same, that they could call Vogelzang on nights and weekends.

“That’s the kind of doctor he is. He really cares,” the patient, Lysa Buonanno, said at the time. “He gives out his cellphone and personal email and told me to get in touch with him whenever I felt I needed to. What other doctor does that?”

Vogelzang, in addition to being written about in the Review-journal was also featured in The New York Times, USA Today, the New England Journal of Medicine, “60 Minutes” and more. He began his career with a medical degree from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

‘One of those one in a million people’

His life wasn’t without hardships. He had his own battle with cancer, Hodgkin’s disease, in the 1980s. The radiation treatment, which damaged his neck, heart, and thyroid, caused his upper body to tilt forward, according to the Harasim column.

He also endured the loss of a child, open heart surgery, and his wife being diagnosed with a sarcoma, a malignant soft-tissue tumor in her thigh, Harasim wrote.

“Those who have worked with Nick, or perhaps who know him personally, understand that he is one of those one in a million people,” Dr. Charles D. Blanke wrote in an Aug. 12 column on the SWOG (Southwest Oncology Group) Cancer Research Network’s website, a cancer research network that includes over 12,000 people at over 1,000 hospitals, according to its website. In his post, Blanke noted that Vogelzang had recently gone into hospice care.

“He is always the smartest person in the room but doesn’t feel a need to inform you of that fact,” Blanke wrote. “He is warm, caring, profession­al, and knowledgea­ble to a fault. And he is an amazing physician and researcher.”

 ?? ?? Dr. Nicholas J. Vogelzang
Dr. Nicholas J. Vogelzang

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