Consider This from NPR - This former NIH chief went public with his prostate cancer to help others
Episode Date: April 26, 2024During the early days of the pandemic, former NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins became a familiar voice steering the country through an unprecedented public health crisis. Now, he is going through his... own health crisis, an aggressive form of prostate cancer. By talking about it publicly he hopes to draw attention to routine screening.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hang on, because we are going to go back in time a little bit.
Well, I'm worried, and I know people are tired of this.
I'm tired of it, too, believe me.
But the virus is not tired of us.
If anybody's listening to this...
When the coronavirus was disrupting and threatening the world.
In those early months, everyone was trying to understand it and its impact.
What do you think about the toll the pandemic has taken, even as it's clearly not over?
It's a terrible toll. We've lost almost...
NPR talked to a lot of medical experts.
You know, I think we learned what we needed to do in terms of social distancing, in terms of wearing masks.
Dr. Francis Collins, then director of the National Institutes of Health, was one of those experts.
Throughout the pandemic, he was a voice of calm when confronting the realities of COVID. Patience, I hate to say it,
is still needed. But I think give us the summer, the early fall. This is going to be a very
different country in a very good way. And we will all be able to sort of look at that and say we got
through it together. And boy, am I ready for that. Collins did his best to help guide the country
through a global health crisis. But now he is speaking out about his own health crisis.
As many times as I have thought about what that feels like to be given a diagnosis of cancer,
it's just a little different when it is coming at you. Coming up, my conversation with Dr.
Collins about why he has gone public with his own cancer diagnosis.
From NPR, I'm Scott Detrow.
It's Consider This from NPR.
Francis Collins has now retired from his perch as director of the National Institutes of Health,
and now he's going through his own health crisis.
I'm doing okay.
Not exactly what I would have hoped to be experiencing right now.
Collins has been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer.
He first wrote all about it in an article published in the Washington Post.
I'm feeling pretty fortunate that thanks to a lot of surveillance and early detection,
I'm in a good position with the surgery that's now coming up soon
to expect that this cancer can be cured.
And that is a lot different than if I hadn't had all of this attention
to make sure that we were watching this closely. I recently spoke with Collins about his diagnosis and how he reacted to the news.
It's one of those moments that I guess we all have once in a while where the words come at you
and you realize my life is now different than it was five seconds ago. When they said that this
cancer, having been previously a very slow growing, not much to see
here kind of version, now in the latest biopsies had switched into high gear, something called
Gleason 9, and it only goes to 10 on that scale. I knew that it was going to be time for action,
serious action, and everything that I had maybe planned for the coming weeks, months,
and years was going to be affected. You mentioned a surgery. Can you tell us about how you're
treating this? So because the cancer does seem to be completely still contained within the prostate
after much searching, to be sure of that, then the best way to avoid a downstream outcome,
which I really would like to avoid
where the cancer spreads elsewhere,
like to bones or to lymph nodes
or to liver, lungs, or brain,
is to actually get the prostate removed.
If you want to use an analogy,
if the horse is the cancer
and the barn is the prostate,
we're not just going to get rid of the horse,
we're going to get rid of the barn too because we're just not quite sure how big that horse is.
So the surgery is what's called a radical prostatectomy. It's done using a robot as
well as a surgeon to try to limit the amount of recovery time, but also to be very precise
in terms of how one does this, trying not to injure the other structures nearby, like the nerves and the vessels, that can be kind of important.
Are you worried about the treatment at all?
I mean, this is, to be blunt, surgery in a pretty intimate part of your body.
And I think more broadly with cancer, a lot of people worry about the treatment.
My dad's around your age.
He's battling cancer right now.
The treatment's working, but I see how much it takes out of him.
No, Scott, you're quite right. And I am worried about that. The surgery has gotten a lot better,
but there's still plenty of opportunities for some men, and maybe that will be me,
to end up with incontinence or with impotence because this is, as you say, a rather sensitive part
of the male anatomy.
As hard as the surgeons try to try to take out the prostate and the cancer, there's a
lot of other things nearby that can be temporarily or sometimes even permanently affected.
And one has to have a realistic expectation walking into this that that could happen.
Yeah. What are you hoping to gain by being so public about your diagnosis?
You know, maybe it feels like it would be a good thing to have more of a discussion about two
things. One is doing this kind of regular early detection for cancers of all sorts, not just
prostate cancer, but breast cancer,
colon cancer. We fell way behind on a lot of those screens during COVID for obvious reasons that
people just weren't able to necessarily go in and have them done. We need to kick back in there
because this is how you detect cancer early and save lives from lots of different areas of the
body. So that was one reason. The other is prostate cancer is particularly one of those
that makes men uncomfortable, and I get that.
And talking about it openly has not always been easy,
and we need to get over that.
And particularly men who have reached the point of age 50 or so
really need to think about what they can do to take care of themselves
with the kind of screening that I had. I honestly think if I hadn't been in this circumstance of detecting something five
years ago that said, oh, there's something happening, following it closely with what we
call active surveillance, and then discovering rather quickly the cancer had taken a bad turn,
I probably wouldn't have known about this for several more years, at which point
it might have presented by metastatic disease, which could not then be cured. So there's a
message here. This kind of surveillance, even though a lot of people put it off, this can be
life-saving. And if there's some little part of my story that gets somebody interested in doing
that for themselves, then it's worth being out
there in the public. I imagine you've had health problems before over the course of your life,
but probably nothing this serious. I'm wondering, being in this position, being on the other side of
the conversation with a medical professional, have you learned something about medicine that
maybe you didn't realize when you were the expert, when you were the person walking somebody through
their options, as opposed to being the person listening to what
your options are? Oh, yeah. It's one thing to be imagining what somebody is experiencing as you're
giving them news that might be really serious and maybe even life-threatening. It's another to be
the person in that spot. As many times as I have thought about what that feels like to be
given a diagnosis of cancer, it's just a little different when it is coming at you. And I realized
I had some of those same difficulties at first about being able to absorb this and listen
carefully and get my head around exactly what was being said and what the consequences would be. So yeah, I think
I will, when I next have the chance to be involved in this kind of circumstance as a physician,
I'll have a different perspective. You know, you mentioned a couple times in the article where you
talked about this news, you mentioned gratitude. Can you tell me what exactly you're grateful for?
I'm grateful that I had the opportunity to take part in this kind of early detection,
which should be now available to everybody, but hasn't broadly been accomplished in a lot of
instances. And we have health inequities in our country that contribute to that. Without that
access, I would not be in the place of being able to anticipate that this disease can be cured.
I'm grateful to have the expertise of people at the NIH.
I'm part of a clinical trial there,
and therefore I'm hoping that whatever is learned about me can be widely shared and can teach people about other ways to deal with this disease.
I'm grateful with all the people that are around me who have been so supportive.
Scott, I can't tell you that when this came out publicly
I just had this deluge of information
and outreach from people some of whom I haven't been around for a while
people who I have had wonderful friendly relationships
with but just in the last day or so
all of these people that I considered friends
have somehow crossed the line in being very comfortable saying, Francis, I love you. The
word love has just come forward in a dramatically positive way. Maybe that's what it takes is for
something like this to get people to say the word. That's pretty touching. That's pretty amazing.
I have, my heart is full of gratitude for that. That's pretty touching. That's pretty amazing. I have,
my heart is full of gratitude for that. That's a nice feeling. But let me actually,
let me ask about that because at the same time, I know that it's also a widespread feeling of when
you hear that somebody you know has gotten a really serious diagnosis or something has really
taken a bad turn with their health. Sometimes people feel like, gosh, I don't even know what to say.
I want to reach out, but I don't know what to say.
You're being reached out to right now.
What would you tell people who kind of wrestle with that?
Oh, I think what some of the people are reaching out to me with
is a great example to say, you know, I'm really supporting of you.
I know you're going through a tough time.
I just want you to know I love you.
That was just astounding.
That's a whole lot better than my thoughts and prayers are with you, which is sort of the old way of saying it. These are very genuine statements of affection that I have very much
cherished. Speaking of praying, though, I did want to ask about how you ended your essay. I'm going
to read a quote from the end of it. You write, a little over a year ago when I was praying for a dying friend, I had the experience of receiving
a clear and unmistakable message. This has almost never happened to me. It was just this,
don't waste your time. You may not have much left. You are getting treated. You are moving
forward. You feel like you have a clear path to beat this cancer and keep going. But tell me how
you're thinking about that sentiment now,
what you want to do with the time you've got left. Well, getting a cancer diagnosis does focus your
mind on that a bit, doesn't it? I am a person of faith, and even before this diagnosis, I had that
particular revelation that you just read about that I don't quite know how to interpret. And in
fact, of course, that's true of all of us. We don't know quite know how to interpret. And in fact,
of course, that's true of all of us. We don't know how much time we have left and we shouldn't be
wasting that time. But it feels more acutely true right now that if there are things I am doing that
are not necessarily contributing much to bettering the people around me or the world, maybe those
things ought to be deprioritized. And I had to really think about how do I want to focus my time on giving the most I can to my family, to my friends, to my profession, to my faith, so that I won't look back and say, oh, I really kind of wasted that.
That feels like a moment to pay attention to, especially when you have a significant cancer that's just landed in the middle of your life
course. Yeah. That's Dr. Francis Collins. He was the director of the National Institutes of Health
from 2009 to 2021. Thanks for talking to us. And we'll be thinking about you as you go through with
this. Oh, thanks a lot, Scott. This episode was produced by Megan Lim and Brianna Scott.
It was edited by Adam Rainey and Jeanette Woods.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
Before we go, a quick thank you to our Consider This Plus listeners who support the show.
Your contribution makes it possible for NPR journalists all around the world to do their jobs.
Supporters also get to hear every episode in even less time with no sponsor messages.
You can learn more at plus.npr.org.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Scott Detrow.