“knowledge is power,” says mary, cochrane’s wife. “once you know what your disease is, you learn what the treatments options are, you can see your path and deal with it.”
cochrane is now a peer support volunteer with lung cancer canada, a speaker and advocate for early lung cancer screening and new treatments. “the way i spell hope is research and clinical trials,” says cochrane.
in recent years, there have been significant improvements in lung cancer treatment. up until a few years ago, chemotherapy was the only treatment option available for the disease. today, for people who are diagnosed with early stage lung cancer, surgery is usually the standard of care, but there is also radiotherapy — a form of radiation that destroys cancer cells without damaging the surrounding healthy tissues. for more advanced cancer or if it has spread to one part of the body or if it has spread widely, drug therapy is used to target cancer cells.
the promise of treatments
compared to other types of cancer, lung cancer receives the least funding for research, but in spite of this, new treatment options like immunotherapy and targeted therapy are available to those affected. immunotherapy uses an individual’s own immune system to control or eliminate the cancer, and now there are diagnostics in place to help oncologists determine which lung cancer patient might benefit from this type of treatment. and while it continues to show promising results, immunotherapy may not work for everyone and some patients may experience side effects.