Aurora, Colorado.
“We have led or contributed to every major development of lung cancer in the past decade,” Kamidge said.
MD and PHD say it helped treat thousands of lung cancer patients from more than 40 states and more than 40 countries. Now, in the development of a crazy life, Camidge is sick with the lung cancer itself.
His journey began in June 2022.
“I noticed the noise of the noise when I was exercising,” Kamidge recalls.
He went to see his primary care doctor to see if he was developing asthma and asked X -rays on the chest.
“I left the office, got X -rays on the chest, then I walked to my office, which is everything in the same building, and I pulled X -rays on my computer and went,” Oh my God, I had lung cancer. “
Kamidge got his doctor. He was diagnosed with advanced lung cancer, which is not associated with smoking, driven by a specific mutation. The cancer has spread and is curable, but it can be controlled with the target treatment in the form of birth control pills.
“I started in these pills, then we received an additional treatment as I added in some chemotherapy, and in some radiotherapy, all this kind of treatments that helped us develop during the past few years, then benefited from it,” he said.
Three years after his diagnosis, Camidge decided to appear on people and show that many types of cancer can be managed to be like a chronic disease.
“I thought I could do some good. I can do some good by going out and say,” Look here, I am still working, I am still studying, I am still searching “and” Oh, by the way, I have cancer “, and this is the message that you want to try to try: that cancer and value are not exclusive and mutual words.”
It also improves treatments and language used to describe side effects.
He said with a smile: “Bugbear is when doctors say this treatment is acceptable, and you are going well, you are not the person he has, you cannot say that.”