Doctor: Kennedy brain surgery 'successful'
Massachusetts senator had risky procedure at Duke University
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Kennedy's surgery 'successful' June 2: Doctors said that surgery on Sen. Edward Kennedy's cancerous brain tumor had been "successful" and was not likely cause any adverse neurological affects. NBC's Robert Bazell reports. Nightly News |
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A message of hope May 22: 16 year-old Nathan Zammit, who has brain cancer, sends a letter to Senator Kennedy about life with cancer and the importance of having hope. Nightly News |
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Obtaining health care at what cost? Nov. 12: Linda Douglass, communications director for the White House Office on Health Reform, discusses whether Congress is sacrificing key aspects of reform just to get a bill passed. |
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DURHAM, N.C. - It was aggressive, risky surgery: Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was lying awake on an operating table with a renowned neurosurgeon hovering over him, cutting away at the brain tumor threatening his life.
But the hard part may not be over: The 76-year-old “liberal lion” of the Senate now must undergo a battery of chemotherapy and radiation.
Though doctors deemed Kennedy’s surgery a success, it will take time before his medical team knows what success means. Experts say the surgery was designed to reduce the tumor’s size and give future treatments a better chance to work.
“The main goal is to remove as much of the tumor as possible to give any other therapy that we do a better chance of working,” said Dr. John Sampson, associate deputy director of Duke’s brain tumor center.
The sole surviving son of America’s most glamorous and tragic political family was diagnosed last month with a malignant glioma, an often lethal type of brain tumor discovered in about 9,000 Americans a year.
Delicate procedure
Details about Kennedy’s exact type of tumor have not been disclosed, but some cancer specialists said it might be a glioblastoma multiforme — an especially deadly and tough-to-remove type — because other kinds are more common in younger people.
Cutting a tumor down to size — or “debulking” it — is extremely delicate because of the risk of harming healthy brain tissue that governs movement and speech. But Dr. Allan Friedman, the top neurosurgeon at Duke and an internationally known tumor surgeon who performed the procedure, said Kennedy should not experience any permanent neurological effects.
Doctors said Kennedy was awake for much of the surgery, which begins with opening the scalp and removing a piece of the skull to expose the brain. Sometimes, to avoid damaging areas that control speech, surgeons use a probe to stimulate parts of the brain, then hold a conversation with the patient.
“I feel like a million bucks. I think I’ll do that again tomorrow,” the 76-year-old Massachusetts Democrat was quoted by a family spokeswoman as telling his wife immediately afterward.
In the following days, Kennedy will probably be given drugs to prevent brain swelling and seizures, which are possible complications of the surgery. The senator will also be closely watched for bleeding and blood clots, because strokes are also a risk, though they are uncommon. He is expected to return to Boston in about a week.
“After a brief recuperation, he will begin targeted radiation at Massachusetts General Hospital and chemotherapy treatment,” Friedman said. “I hope that everyone will join us in praying for Sen. Kennedy to have an uneventful and robust recovery.”
Doctors found the tumor last month after Kennedy suffered a seizure at his home on Cape Cod.
Surgery best option for extending life
Rep. William Delahunt, D-Mass., a longtime friend of Kennedy’s, said Kennedy threw himself into helping find treatment options in much the same way he searched for cures when son Edward Jr. faced bone cancer at age 12 and daughter Kara had lung cancer five years ago.
He went so far was to pull Kara out of Johns Hopkins and brought her to a Boston hospital when he was not satisfied with her initial course of treatment. In his own case, he met on Friday with family and doctors at Mass General and decided then to head to Duke for treatment, Delahunt said.
The outlook for patients with malignant gliomas is poor. Median survival for patients with moderately severe ones is three to five years, and less than a year those with the most severe type.
Surgery is rarely a cure but is considered the best option for extending life. But because of the risks, especially in someone as old as Kennedy, doctors sometimes advise against it.
In Friedman, Kennedy picked “one of the thought leaders” in the field of neuro-oncology, said Dr. Otis Brawley, the top doctor at the American Cancer Society. Dr. Matthew Ewend, chief of neurosurgery at the University of North Carolina, said: “He’s an excellent surgeon. His patients are in very good hands.”
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