Professor Shares Cancer Remission Journey
Every five years, Professor Mark Whitener uses himself as case study to impart lessons on disease, chemotherapy and life after cancer
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Every five years, to celebrate another milestone anniversary of being cancer-free, Chemistry and Biochemistry Associate Professor Mark Whitener at 麻豆传媒在线. This year marks his 35th year cancer free.
Whitener, now in his 30th year at 麻豆传媒在线, recently shared his cancer journey in a classroom in Richardson Hall and via Zoom with an audience made up of chemistry and biology students, faculty and the public.
Whitener鈥檚 background as a chemist and cancer survivor gives him a unique perspective, one he鈥檚 also documented in his online 鈥,鈥 which he wrote 10 years ago to mark 25 years in remission and to serve a wider, non-academic audience.
At the outset, Whitener鈥檚 straight talk and humor, something that he, like many people faced with a serious diagnosis, adopted as a coping mechanism, are evident. Displaying a photo of himself as a young bald man, he says, 鈥淢ost of my hair is gone due to male pattern baldness but I was 27 years old when this happened鈥ecause I had cancer chemotherapy.鈥
He explains that his presentation, which includes handwritten slides and cartoon-like drawings, is messy and not polished and that the 62-year-old will be turning 35 because he celebrates his 鈥渟econd birthday鈥 from the last day of his chemotherapy treatment.
鈥淚 like it being messy because going through cancer is pretty messy,鈥 he says. 鈥淐ancer is bad but there are some good stories. I鈥檓 an example of a successful, positive outcome from cancer.鈥
With that he launches into his introduction of how cancer cells grow and spread, chemotherapy treatment and his personal bout with non-Hodgkin鈥檚 lymphoma as a case study.

鈥淚鈥檓 going to say some scary things during this talk,鈥 he says before adding, 鈥淓veryone in this room has a cancer cell in you right now鈥ut you also have an immune system.鈥
He also shares that 鈥渃ancer is not one disease; there鈥檚 a hundred different cancers鈥 and American Cancer Society statistics on various types of cancers among Americans, as well as survival rates. 鈥淵ou have a risk of one in 2.5 鈥 or two out of five people 鈥 of getting cancer,鈥 he says, telling the mostly college-age crowd, 鈥淢ost cancers are in older people.鈥
That was not Whitener鈥檚 experience. While in graduate school at Harvard University, he noticed what he thought was a pimple on his right temple. He was healthy and had no family history of cancer, so that never entered his mind. But then the 鈥減imple鈥 grew to the size of an English pea and soon classmates were asking if he鈥檇 bumped his head. He decided to get it checked. The doctor told him it was a cyst that could easily be removed. During the surgical procedure, however, he heard, “Oops.”
鈥淥f all the words one would care to hear from a man with a knife to your head, that ranks pretty low,鈥 Whitener says, adding that the doctor became nervous and engaged him in small talk. Soon he learned why.

Whitener鈥檚 world went, as he put it, 鈥淏OOM!鈥 As he explains in his Chronicles: 鈥淏eing told you have cancer is like having a shotgun go off near your head. It is very disorienting, and one tends not to hear much for a while.鈥
While his doctor delivered the bad news about cancer, he said the good news was that Whitener was in Boston, home to the Dana Farber Comprehensive Cancer Center, which is where he sought treatment.
Studying chemistry, he says he focused on the 鈥渃hemo鈥 part of chemotherapy, taking advantage of Harvard鈥檚 medical library to learn all he could about his cancer and treatment, as well as medicine and psychological factors.聽 He also learned about 鈥渃hemo-brain,鈥 a mental fog related to cancer-treatment that can cause cognitive impairment or dysfunction. He says it took about a year and a half before it lifted and he felt more himself.
While his talk is heavy on science, delving into DNA, cell cycle and even a brief history of cancer treatments, his Cancer Chronicles are written in lay terms for non-scientists.
His sense of humor is evident in both: 鈥淢y appearance was pretty funny. You take eyebrows for granted until you don’t have any.鈥
There are many purposes of his chronicles, including 鈥渃atharsis, education, information, celebration.鈥 He offers advice on how to support people battling the dreaded disease and also hopes to turn the chronicles into a book to help others affected by cancer.
Michael Berger, 11, attended the talk with his mother Computer Science Associate Professor Katherine Herbert, and asked Whitener which cancer is the 鈥渕ost dangerous?鈥
Whitener responds: 鈥淚鈥檓 going to answer that in a very cheeky way: It’s the one you have.鈥 He pauses before adding that 鈥減ancreatic cancer is a very dangerous one because it generally is not able to be detected early and often has a very poor prognosis.鈥
Herbert, whose family is friends with Whitener, has lost many family members to cancer, including her mother. 鈥淲e have always been honest with our children about why my parents aren’t around and certain other people 鈥 overwhelmingly, it has been cancer,鈥 Herbert says. As a result, her son has shown an interest in cancer research, and has a lot of ideas about how cancer treatment can possibly be improved, Herbert says. 鈥淗earing the talk from a scientist who had a personal stake in the outcome is a unique experience.鈥
Many in the audience were students in Chemistry and Biochemistry Professor David Rotella鈥檚 Chemical Literature class, including聽 juniors Abigail Chang and Perla Huerta.
Afterward, Chang shared that family members in every generation have been diagnosed with or died of cancer. She said she found Whitener鈥檚 talk informative about 鈥渨hat cancer is and how we can treat it.鈥 The Biochemistry major says she鈥檚 supporting her 45-year-old aunt who just completed chemotherapy and will start radiation treatment for Stage 4 uterine cancer by explaining information to her. 鈥淭he best thing I can do is learn more about it,鈥 she says, adding that she wants to help her aunt 鈥渙vercome her diagnosis due to all of the science I learn.鈥

Sophomore Molecular Biology major Jeffrey Yumbla attended Whitener鈥檚 talk because he had a cancer scare and has pancreatitis. He liked that 鈥渋t was presented in a way that was understandable for all audiences and because it dealt with a field of study that I am passionate about,鈥 he says, adding that the talk has 鈥渞einvigorated my desire to become a medical- research doctor in order to contribute to the efforts against this disease.鈥

Asked by a colleague if his cancer journey has changed him, Whitener says he assumes the question is rhetorical before adding: 鈥淚t did change my life, of course. Little things don’t bother me so much. When someone cuts me off in traffic, I just go, I’ve been through chemotherapy, that’s nothing.鈥
Later, Whitener, who says he was 鈥減retty laid back鈥 before his diagnosis and treatment, adds he鈥檚 been affected in other ways: 鈥淚鈥檓 more empathetic to people who have diseases. It鈥檚 made me appreciate my health more, appreciate the body more. It鈥檚 given me a greater appreciation for medicine.鈥
Not surprising from a man who closes his talk with a sincere thank you and a toast he wrote and posted on Facebook on February 9, 2013, the 25th year of being cancer-free.
Today, I will raise my glass:
To 25 years free from cancer,
To those who treat,
To those who care,
To those who pray,
To those who hope,
To those who love,
To those who fear,
To those who seek a cure,
To those who survive,
To those who fight,
To those who lost,
To those who have lost.
Hold dear to every hour you live.
Story by Staff Writer聽Sylvia A. Martinez. Photos by聽John J. LaRosa.