"Margaret was a retired librarian. Non-smoker. Walked three miles a day. Six months ago, she noticed she felt full after eating only a few bites. She thought it was age. Three months ago, she noticed her stool was darker. She thought it was iron pills. Two weeks ago, she felt a lump in her right lower quadrant. She thought it was a muscle.
"Margaret’s primary tumor was 7 cm. It had invaded the omentum—that fatty apron of the abdomen. That’s what she felt as a lump. The omentum tried to wall it off, but the tumor just grew inside it like ivy on a fence." Part 4: The Diagnosis (The Biopsy) The slide changes to a histology image: disorganized glands, dark purple nuclei, mitotic figures. pathology lecture
She turns off the projector. The room is silent. "Margaret was a retired librarian
Setting: A darkened lecture hall, 8:00 AM. The smell of coffee and formaldehyde. Dr. Helena Voss, a pathologist in her 50s with steady hands and tired eyes, stands at a podium. On the screen behind her is a single slide: a biopsy stained pink and purple. Six months ago, she noticed she felt full
"But 'incurable' does not mean 'untreatable.' We have chemotherapy—FOLFOX or FOLFIRI. We have bevacizumab to block VEGF, stop the angiogenesis. We have immunotherapy if she’s MSI-high. Margaret was MSS—stable. So no magic bullet. But we could buy her time. Good time. Time to see her grandson’s first birthday." Part 5: The Final Chapter (The Autopsy) The last slide is a quote from William Osler: "Medicine is a science of uncertainty and an art of probability."
The professor collects her papers.