In the five years since Ellen Smith was diagnosed with Stage IV lung cancer, she has been busy.
She traveled the world, indulging her love of art and art history. She celebrated the births of four more grandchildren, expanding her large family even more. She married Ben Smith, the man she calls her “best friend.”
None of this seemed possible in June 2009 when she learned that the lung cancer, which had been initially diagnosed in 2008, had spread to her abdomen and brain.
“You hear ‘Stage IV’ and you say ‘How many months or days do I have left?’” Smith said.
“But between the Anschutz Medical Campus and the good Lord, I am still here.”
Smith called in late to work on April 1, 2008—April Fools’ Day. She had a nagging cough, and her primary care physician, who suspected she might have pneumonia, sent her to the hospital for tests.
Smith did have pneumonia. She also had a mass in her left lung. Five biopsies later, she learned that she had non-small cell lung cancer. She was 58 years old, with no other health problems, and she had never been a smoker.
“After you hear the ‘C’ word, you just think that’s synonymous with death,” Smith said. “But I still felt like I had a lot to live for and a lot to do.”
Smith underwent chemotherapy to shrink the tumor, and in August 2008, surgeons removed her entire left lung. Five months later, when the cancer returned under her sternum, doctors treated her with radiation. But despite this aggressive treatment, the cancer advanced to Stage IV.
Smith’s three adult children had been researching lung cancer, and their investigation led them to the website for the CU Cancer Center at the Anschutz Medical Campus, where they found a number they could call for a second opinion. The good news? D. Ross Camidge, MD, PhD, was doing a clinical trial for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer. The bad news? There was only a 4 percent chance Smith’s cancer would have the specific molecular markers that would qualify for the trial.
She was in Scotland on what she thought might be a final vacation when her son called her with the news. She was a match for the clinical trial. “I went from terror to ‘Oh my gosh, there is hope,’” Smith said.
Smith started the clinical trial at the end of July 2009. She was one of the first people in the world to take crizotinib, an ALK inhibitor which is designed to block the gene that drives the lung cancer. Two months later, Smith sat with two of her children, Camidge, and Ben Smith, whom she had been dating since the summer of 2005, and stared at PET scans of her entire body.
“The cancer had disappeared off the scans,” Camidge said. “I was delighted.”
“Dr. Camidge said to me, ‘We cannot cure your cancer, but we can control it,’” Smith said. “I understood that this would be the new norm—living with cancer.”
A year later, Ben came over to her house with a serious look on his face. Ellen Smith suspected that their relationship was about to end, a casualty of cancer. Instead, he proposed with words that could easily double as vows. “I will be here with you and for you,” he said. “You’re not going to journey through this alone.”
Through the years, Ellen Smith’s cancer has gone through phases, sometimes outwitting the drugs. During those periods, she has had traditional infusion chemotherapy and radiation and then returned to an ALK inhibitor. When that drug stopped working, she began another clinical trial with a second-generation ALK inhibitor.
“Lung cancer has been treated as one disease for decades,” Camidge said. “We know now there are different types of lung cancer, so you can’t apply the dogma of the last 20 years. You need to be a clinical pioneer, looking over the next mountain, exploring. You’re on a journey with the patient, their family and the drug company, and no one knows the outcome. You’re trying to figure it out together.”
Smith praises Camidge for his willingness to “think outside the box and be open to all sorts of options” with her treatment.
“Dr. Camidge is brilliant,” she said. “He is also compassionate. I think of him as my brother.”
“Anschutz (Medical Campus) is the place to go,” Smith said. “They know that when dealing with cancer, one size doesn’t fit all. It’s very personalized care, individualized to the type of cancer. It’s a whole new way of thinking.”
“Ellen has helped other people,” said Camidge. “The data we have published about her case has changed the world multiple times.”
CU Cancer Center is the only National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center in the Rocky Mountain Region. It is known for its personalized cancer treatments and robust and diverse clinical research and clinical trials program. It is home to one of the world’s best lung cancer research and treatment programs.
“I think patients believe we provide compassionate expertise,” Camidge said. “We will go the extra 10 miles for every patient.”
With the largest number of human cancer clinical trials in the region, CU Cancer Center provides patients across the state and the region with access to the newest possible types of cancer care.
A 2013 Outcomes Report from the CU Cancer Center and the University of Colorado Hospital shows that five-year survival rates for many types of Stage IV cancer outperform national rates.
Breast Cancer:
Colon Cancer:
Liver Cancer:
Lung Cancer:
Ovarian Cancer:
Prostate Cancer:
After 40 years of working for the power company in Wyoming, Chris Cottle has now retired to pursue his many interests: working with wood, rebuilding automobiles and planting “one giant vegetable garden.” He does not intend to let bladder cancer slow him down.
He was diagnosed in 2009 when he was 53 years old. “(We) had never had cancer in our family, so it was a real shock to hear the word,” he said.
Even though he lives in Cheyenne, Wyo., Cottle didn’t hesitate to travel to the University of Colorado Hospital for surgery to remove the fast-growing cancer. “It was a no-brainer,” he said. “They are the experts in the field.”
Cottle underwent a radical cystectomy, a procedure he describes in no-nonsense terms. “They make you a neo-bladder out of a section of your small intestine, hook it up to your plumbing and everything works great,” he said. “It’s pretty amazing.”
In 2013, when a routine CT scan showed one enlarged lymph node, Cottle returned to the CU Cancer Center for treatment.
“You used to think of cancer as ‘The End,’ he said. “Now, at the University of Colorado, you have a wonderful place to get treatment.”
Ellen Smith and Chris Cottle have experienced first-hand what the CU Cancer Center does best: offer personalized care that embraces the best clinical practices of prevention, diagnosis, treatment and survivorship, delivered by experts with one goal—translating science into life.