Former Stanford and Nets star Jason Collins battling stage 4 brain cancer
Briefly

Former Stanford and Nets star Jason Collins battling stage 4 brain cancer
"What makes glioblastoma so dangerous is that it grows within a very finite, contained space the skull and it's very aggressive and can expand, Collins wrote. What makes it so difficult to treat in my case is that it's surrounded by the brain and is encroaching upon the frontal lobe which is what makes you, you.' Glioblastoma is the most common form of brain cancer in adults, according to the American Cancer Society."
"Collins said he and his family first realized something was wrong in August, when he missed a flight due to brain fog and scattered thoughts. He began receiving treatment shortly afterward, even flying to Singapore to receive targeted chemotherapy. On average, someone with Collins' cancer will live for an additional 11 to 14 months, he wrote. If that's all the time I have left, I'd rather spend it trying a course of treatment that might one day be a new standard of"
Jason Collins, 47, has been diagnosed with stage four glioblastoma, an aggressive brain cancer encroaching on his frontal lobe. The cancer grows within the skull and spreads quickly around the brain or spinal cord, endangering central nervous system functions. Collins first noticed symptoms in August after missing a flight due to brain fog and scattered thoughts. Early CT imaging at UCLA prompted referral to a specialist. Collins began treatment soon after and traveled to Singapore for targeted chemotherapy. Average survival for this diagnosis is 11 to 14 months, and Collins is pursuing treatments that might one day become a new standard.
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