Paint the Paper Pink

A double dose of breast cancer and the loss of her husband to cancer doesn’t defeat a real warrior
Katie Fry celebrates one year free of breast cancer!

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[October 24, 2024]   As of October 24, 2024, Katie Fry celebrated a year since getting to ring the bell at St. John’s Hospital, signifying that she had officially won her battle with breast cancer.

She is a 78-year-young mother, grandmother, great grandmother and was a caring, with unconditional love wife to her late husband Ray. “I know I was very lucky to catch my cancer when I did. My calendar was always full of appointments for one of us.

"We didn’t know at the time, but soon my husband would be diagnosed with myeloproliferative neoplasm, and the prognosis wasn’t good.”

Myeloproliferative neoplasm is a severe, rare type of blood cancer, something you would never wish upon your worst enemy. There can’t be anything much worse than battling your own severe sickness while you watch your partner of over 45 years do the same. “He wanted to drive me to my surgeries, but I couldn't see him in the waiting room because of the pain he would feel sitting in those chairs and how weak he was getting. At home he would have been physically comfortable, but at the hospital I couldn't take care of him.”

Katie held suspicion over the years about the pain in her breast, of whether it was natural changes with age or her heart. She has been getting routine mammograms and has always worked hard on keeping up with her health. She goes on routine walks and trips with her family to stay active, as well as keeping a close eye on her cholesterol, blood sugar, diet and weight. Nothing was ever found in any of her mammograms, so when she brought up her concerns of occasional pain in her right breast, she was told not to worry about it. Many professionals shared that milk glands and hormones change as people get older; she should be fine because her mammograms looked great.

Katie let her intuition fall under the radar for many years until she noticed her right nipple had collapsed. She did not rush to make a doctor’s appointment as she had her six month checkup approaching. Katie was unsure of why it might have collapsed, but she did not let it break her spirit. She remembers laughing about it with Ray, joking that her “nipple turned into a valley!”

By the time she made it to her appointment, she almost didn't mention anything, remembering how many nurses and doctors told her that her mammograms were clear. She decided to speak up after some of her own research had revealed that a nipple collapse could be a sign of breast cancer. The doctor listened intently to her story and promptly completed a breast exam. He said he didn't feel a bump but scheduled her for an ultrasound within the coming week.

To Katie and her family’s dismay, the biopsy revealed a small, one centimeter cancerous mass. In late 2022, Katie was diagnosed with stage two HR+ HER2- cancer. Luckily, this cancer is a slow grower and not commonly aggressive. “I wasn’t initially very scared; many of my friends are cancer survivors; it is what it is. The hardest part was making up my mind about breast removal or balancing them.”

After several appointments, Katie was on her way to her partial mastectomy and left breast reduction. After an entire day in the hospital, Katie was taken home by her granddaughter, Devyn, to rest.

Katie went back after she was healed up to get her left breast checked and her right rechecked, and unfortunately a larger mass of six centimeters was discovered. She spoke to a radiologist and the surgeon once more and was encouraged to get a full mastectomy. Katie was against removing her right breast, as she still had “one good sized breast.”

“I was pissed when he told me I needed to go back into surgery to get my breast taken off because I already had gone through the recovery process. I had perky boobs like I was young again! I had to go in just to ruin what a great job they did.” At first she was certain radiation would finish the job. Yet, the more Katie thought about it, she knew it would be better to make sure and go through with the full mastectomy.

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When she returned to the surgeon, he was pleased she had decided to remove the full breast and joked that it would have been easier to go this route the first time around. Katie looked back warmly on the memory of breaking the ice with her stoic surgeon, now being able to joke together and talk about family. “I didn't find anyone that wasn’t nice in this whole process.” In their appointment, the surgeon mentioned that the plastic surgeon could give her implants or an LD flap reconstruction to take some fat from her back to reform her right breast. She declined the implants as in rare cases people can develop lymphoma, but with the option of reconstruction, she was thrilled! “I’d always wanted these things really reduced! I just wanted to be down to a B or C-cup, which was going to be a big change for me.”

Katie was entering her third surgery with a fourth ahead of her, and she would hopefully come out a cancer-free woman. She was dropped off by her son, Eric, and stayed in the hospital to recover for three days. “I remember it being nice to be the one being taken care of; I haven’t had much of a break since before I had my kids.” Once she made it home, her friend Judy (a former nurse) would come over every morning for three weeks to help her drain the fluid from her LD flap and measure the liquids until the drainage was low enough that she could return to the doctor to get the tubes removed.

After healing from the mastectomy and breast reconstruction, Katie was referred to St. Johns in Springfield for radiation treatments. However, her radiation was postponed for almost a month due to a cybersecurity attack on St. John’s. Once she was finally able to start, she was given three gas cards to help with her appointments and a few free bras to get her started. “Everyone was super friendly. I couldn't have asked for a better crew. I went Monday through Friday for five weeks and I showed up early every day. We told stories and really became friends. They said they would truly miss me and that I was such a sweet, fun lady.” Katie had perfect results from radiation, “I had no blistering, my skin didn't change a bit. Many people said they hated the idea of radiation because of that.” Katie laughed and said, “I put on all my creams and Aquaphor through radiation, sometimes I wondered if the machine was working because my skin wasn’t changing! It wasn't really stressful for me; I was really lucky to be healing so well.”

When asked about her last day of radiation, she exclaimed, "Oh, that day was great! I said, ‘You gotta take my picture while I ring this bell! Ring ring ring, I'm free!’ They are the best group of ladies at St. John’s. Sometimes it feels like I still have my nipple even though I don't. Since my boobs are smaller, they don't choke me when I sleep at night,” she laughs, “and I can wear button downs!”

Now, Katie only has to worry about yearly mammograms and a breast exam every few months. She feels that with her own at-home checks, it's hard to tell what might be a lump or scar tissue, but now that she is on her doctor’s radar, she can relax. “If I could have done anything differently, I would have reported nipple collapse sooner and maybe caught the cancer sooner. But when you’re my age you think these changes are age-related. I wish there would have been a bone marrow test on Ray long, long ago, but no one thought of that.” Ray would pass just under a year later, and while Katie misses him dearly, she carries on with her family and friends. Katie is a force to be reckoned with and has stood the test of time over and over again. There is not anything she cannot overcome, not even breast cancer.

[Lovingly written by her granddaughter Devyn Fry]

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