
Bonnie Addario founder of the Bonnie J Addario Lung Cancer Foundation ,left, Emma Kuuleilani Olsen middle, and baseball player Vin Mazzaro
By Kevin Meagher
National Foundation Raises Awareness For Number One Cancer Killer
SAN FRANCISCO (Hollywood Today/RPRN) 7/27/2009–On August 2nd the Bonnie J Addario Lung Cancer Foundation is sponsoring a 5k walk/run in the Golden Gate Park of San Francisco. The first of its kind for lung cancer in San Francisco, the Addario Foundation will be chalking up another success towards raising awareness and funds for what the American Cancer Society tells us is the deadliest of all cancers.
According to the Lung Cancer Review, 450 people die every day from lung cancer in the United states alone. Though over ½ of lung cancer patients quit smoking decades prior to diagnoses or never smoked at all, it has been greatly stigmatized by its association with smoking.
The Addario Foundation believes that this is largely the reason that the funding allocated by the federal government is only ¼ the amount that is put towards breast cancer in its yearly budget. While according to the American Cancer Society, lung cancer kills more people annually than breast cancer, prostate cancer, and colon cancer combined.
The Addario Foundation has a problem with those and many other statistics which expose disparaging differences in the funding for lung cancer versus other cancers with better survivability ratings.
A cancer survivor herself, Bonnie Addario was diagnosed with, and lost a lung to the disease back in 2004. Not every cancer victim has the resources or the motivation to start a foundation, but when Bonnie saw the statistics she decided that something must be done.
“First of all, you have to be just a tad insane“ Said Addario to RushPRNews,
“Honestly, I look back on all of this and really had no idea where it was going to go. I originally thought what I would do is start this foundation and you know, have a gala and maybe a golf tournament, maybe a run, and give all of the money to UCSF for research. But then I discovered that really more needed to be done all across the United States and even in other countries”.
With the lack of funding for new treatment methods evident, Addario started doing research of her own, “Nothing I read or researched on my own indicated that there was really any work being done on any genetic propensity for this disease, and it had always been blamed on smoking”.
A smoker herself for 20 years, Addario understood the stigma. But after losing 5 members of her family to lung cancer, she realized that there was an obvious pattern, one that surprised her. “When I realized that 60% of the newly diagnosed cases of lung cancer were either in people who quit smoking decades ago, or never started at all. I really thought: I need to look into this genetic issue a little bit more. I did some random checking and research; talking to people and what have you, and now there is a consensus.”
It was around then that Addario decided it was time to launch her second endeavor into the Lung Cancer world. In 2008 she founded the Addario Lung Cancer Medical Institute (ALCMI, pronounced ‘alchemy‘). “ALCMI is dedicated solely to research and genomics and collaborations with other institutions. We are actually going to be the first ones who are collectively and collaboratively screening tissue samples for lung cancer bio-markers. There are other entities that are doing some bio-marker research randomly and somewhat after the fact, but we are going to be doing it early on in the patient’s care”.
Addario told RushPRNews that the research has not found that in all cases of lung cancer has the patient been genetically predisposed, “but now that they are looking for bio-markers for this disease, its looking more and more like that.”
The research ALCMI is doing suggests that some of us are more predisposed to different types of cancer than others and if we avoid things that may activate our cells we may be able to avoid getting the disease. “Lung cancer can be smoking, it can be radon, it can be asbestos, really it can be any kind of toxin you are exposed to on a regular basis. They can activate the cell and make it say, ‘ok, go turn yourself into cancer. And this goes for breast cancer, prostate cancer, whatever”
Presently, says the American Cancer Society, the most common method of diagnoses for lung cancer involves getting a CT scan. By looking for lesions in the images provided by the scan, shadows in the image can expose problem areas. The next step is to get a somewhat invasive biopsy from the highlighted area which quite often is benign or not unhealthy tissue at all.
Significantly, studies done by Dr. Joseph R. DiFranza, a family health and community medicine specialist at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester, demonstrate that teens can become addicted to nicotine after just one smoke. DiFranza told the New York Times during a February 12, 2008 interview that ““We have long assumed that kids got addicted because they were smoking 5 or 10 cigarettes a day,” furthermore adding, “Now we know that they risk addiction after trying a cigarette just once.”
At the end of this interview, Addario made it clear to this reporter that this walk/run event for lung cancer is about raising awareness and clearing the dark cloud surrounding the disease more than anything else, “ I can‘t go back to when I was 16 and not go into my girlfriend‘s basement and have a cigarette,” Addario said to RPRN, “ and we all make mistakes in our youth, but does that mean we shouldn’t get the same care as other cancer victims?”
“When you are born into this world, the best thing you can do is leave this world a better place, and this is kind of ‘paying it forward’ to me. If I can change those statistics? Then I will have left the world a better place for my kids and grand kids” – Bonnie J. Addario
(The Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation’s Walk/Run begins at 4:30pm in the Golden Gate Park of San Francisco with the starting point at the band shell between the Academy of Science and DeYoung Museum.)
photo credit x-ray image of a chest. Both sides of the lungs are visible with a growth on the left side of the lung, which could be lung cancer. source:National Cancer Institute author: unknown date: May 1988
photo credit: JAMES HALL PHOTOGRAPHY web: 88zero.com









9 responses so far ↓
1 Mary Rose // Jul 27, 2009 at 7:03 pm
This is so sad. I have a 52 year old brother diagnosed May 7, 2009 with small cell lung cancer and lymph nodes. He is fighting for his life right now. We all need help. This is the hardest thing I have ever been through in my life.
2 Julia // Jul 27, 2009 at 8:40 pm
You’re right….it is very sad. I lost my 48 year old husband Jan of this year only six months after diagnosis. He also had small cell Lung Cancer with lymph node involvement. Up until he was diagnosed, you wouldn’t have even known he was sick. The only regret we had was doing the chemotherapy. It was so hard on him….he seemed to go downhill really fast after treatment was started. Your brother is in for the fight of his life….I wish him all the best….good luck….Julia
3 maya // Jul 29, 2009 at 4:22 pm
My mom has just been diagnosed with NSCLC 3B , thankfully no mets yet.this July 4,2009.Her right lung was fuly collapsed and full of fluid. It came as a shock to me coz mom doesn’t smoke at all. am now looking for help for her chemotherapy medications ( she hasn’t started on it yet) since she has no insurance at all.. Medicaid wont pick her up yet..
Anybody out there knows where I can turn to that might can help us?
4 In Memory of So Many // Aug 2, 2009 at 12:44 pm
A much broader range of people are affected by this disease than most are aware of. That false sense of security that if you don’t smoke you will never get lung cancer is finally starting to fade away along with old habits. Becoming more involved with lung cancer awareness after losing my mother to this horrible disease, I’ve been enlightened and saddened to know how many lung cancer victims have never smoked! In fact, they seem to be the majority now. To me, just one case of lung cancer without any links to smoking should be cause for concern and warrant research into what ELSE is causing this deadly disease! It’s unfortunate that so many have to suffer needlessly because of old prejudices. More research and early detection protocols are necessary for all of our sakes! No one deserves cancer, no matter it’s label!
5 Barbara // Aug 7, 2009 at 9:01 am
My mother had small cell lung cancer. The good news about SCLC is that it responds best to chemotherapy. But SCLC also metasticizes – so you need to keep getting checked. It tends to like the liver and the brain – which is why PET scans are necessary for follow up.
6 Kazeldtq // Aug 12, 2009 at 5:58 pm
Hi webmaster! jmd
7 alisha // Oct 26, 2009 at 9:57 pm
I just lost my father to SCLC on Sept. 17 ,09. He was diagnosed in Oct. last year. He was a fighter and a trooper…he did well with the chemo and radiation he didn’t really get sick with it and he even gained weight (which was great). He went to work everyday (just a little slower) but he kept busy. In Aug. went in to have his collapsed lung glued to his chest and fluid drained and go home 5 days later but that never happened. Things started turning for the worst until he passed. This disease really does need some notice so bless you Addario for doing what your doing. Hopefully you can bring the walk/run down south as my mom and I would love to do one. Keep up the good work Alisha
8 Kristi // Apr 21, 2010 at 6:20 am
My father committed suicide December 13, 2004, two days after his only grand daughter’s first birthday. He was dying from Stage IV+ lung cancer. By the time it was found it had already mets to his brain, liver, kidney, and adrenal gland. He toughed it out for nine months.
Now I’m doing anti-smoking talks at my daughter’s elementary school, and I’m using pretty graphic photos to try and shock these kids from ever starting.
I just read about the levels of radioactive elements that are in tobacco, so I thought I’d get a photo of a good CXR with lung CA. I hate to say this, but this CXR is exactly what I’m looking for. It will get added to my arsenal.
Lung CA is the leading killer of cancers, yet is the least funded. And NON-smokers get lung CA, so this is not just a smoker’s disease.
More awareness and funding needs to be provided to stop this devastating cancer.
Thank you,
Kristi, RRT
Omaha
9 Cigarest // Apr 27, 2010 at 6:15 am
Smoking bans will reduce cancer
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