Just in: U.S. Defense Sec. Lloyd Austin fesses up on being 'gut punched' and keeping U.S. in dark
All about Fight Club/Support Club
By Howard Wolinsky
Remember the movie “Fight Club”?
The First Rule of Fight Club is You Don’t Talk about Fight Club. And the Second Rule of Fight Club is You Don’t Talk about Fight Club. (See below for a refresher.)
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin leads the biggest Fight Club in the world—the U.S. Military. And for sure, after he was diagnosed with prostate cancer, he followed the First Rule of Fight Club to the T.
He didn’t talk about it. In fact, he kept it secret to the point of a cover-up.
Austin had reached the point of setting up a stealthy command center at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. I imagined him sitting in a gown on the edge of his hospital bed, watching on a secure big screen, as he called in drone attacks on Houthis on the Red Sea.
Austin even withheld his diagnosis from his boss, Commander in Chief/President Joe Biden. He got into deep shit for his secrecy and potential compromise of national security. Congress went on the warpath. And the Pentagon Inspector General is conducting an investigation.
Austin did a disservice also to the community of (reluctant) brothers, especially Black brothers, by not speaking publicly about this common cancer. He was speaking from a place of stigma. It was indefensible.
On Feb. 1, Austin returned to the Pentagon. A seemingly contrite Austin apologized during a press briefing.
He described the diagnosis—a la Fight Club—as a "gut punch" and noted that his first instinct was to keep his diagnosis private -- which he acknowledged was a misjudgment,
"We did not handle this right. I did not handle this right," Austin said.
"I should have told the president about my cancer diagnosis, and should also have told my team and the American public," he said. "I take full responsibility. I apologize to my teammates and to the American people."
Austin underwent a minimally invasive robotic urgical procedure for prostate cancer on Dec. 22, which led to a urinary tract infection and serious intestinal complications. He was hospitalized again on Jan. 1, but the White House didn't learn of it for three days.
Austin made a personal apology to Biden. But full responsibility? He blamed one of his aides for trying to take attention off the incident by asking a 911 crew to run silent by turning off sirens and lights when they picked up Austin. Come on, soldier.
Austin told reporters he realized he blew an opportunity to increase awareness about prostate cancer, especially among Black men.
"The news shook me, as I know that it shakes so many others, especially in the Black community. It was a gut punch," he told reporters. "And frankly, my first instinct was to keep it private. I don't think it's news that I'm a pretty private guy. I never like burdening others with my problems. It's just not my way."
"But I've learned from this experience. Taking this kind of job means losing some of the privacy that most of us expect. The American people have a right to know if their leaders are facing health challenges that might affect their ability to perform their duties -- even temporarily. So a wider circle should have been notified, especially the president."
"I was diagnosed with a highly treatable form of cancer," he said. "A pretty common one: one in eight American men will get prostate cancer, one in six Black men will get it. And so I'm here with a clear message to other men, especially older men. Get screened. Get your regular checkups."
So. mea culpa, and let’s move along? Time will tell.
The net effect of the Austin debacle is the word got out and maybe some more men will have been helped. I don’t think the case of the secret prostate cancer diagnosis is over yet.
My take in MedPage Today on the Austin case. And CNN on prostate cancer in Black men.
Again, at ease, soldier Austin. You’re welcome to join support groups.
Rules of Support Club: Remember--it's Not Fight Club. Do talk about Support Club. We've got your back, bruh. First night? You don't have to fight.
By Howard Wolinsky
One of my all-time favorite movies, “Fight Club,” deals with support groups--and a couple of characters who feign illnesses to participate in groups to fill empty holes in their psyches by observing others’ pain and suffering.
The first-person narrator (Edward Norton) attends support groups in an attempt to subdue his emotional state and relieve his insomnia.
The narrator’s doctor persuades him to attend a support group for testicular cancer patients to observe real pain. He has an emotional release when a castrated patient (the late singer Meat Loaf) hugs him between his huge motherly breasts from gynecomastia induced by hormone therapy.
The narrator becomes addicted to support groups, mapping out his week attending different meetings and faking illness. He hooks up with another medical faker, Marla Singer (Helena Bonham Carter), who he has seen at many different meetings, including the testicular cancer group.
He challenges her presence at the testicular cancer session. She pushes back and says she's a better fit there than him because he still has his testicles.
Over the past seven years, I’ve have helped start and attend virtual support groups for patients with low-risk Gleason 6 prostate cancer. [Check out Active Surveillance Patients International and the AnCan Foundation Virtual Support Group for AS.)
First, I went as an observer, a journalist fly-on-the-wall, writing an article for my blog at MedPage Today.
I found the meetings were useful for men who had been treated and were experiencing side effects, such as “chemobrain,” enlarged breasts from androgen deprivation therapy, erectile dysfunction, and urinary and fecal incontinence from radical prostatectomies or radiation therapy.
The groups were well-run, but patients on Active Surveillance for lower-risk prostate cancer were a poor fit. I knew guys who were scared to death by what they heard and quit support groups on the spot. They thought they would automatically move into more advanced cancers with all the scary side effects. It happens to a handful, not many.
In 2017, Thrainn Thorvaldssman, a fellow patient found out about my blog and told me about a support group he had started in Iceland to help men like us with low-risk prostate cancer. He asked me if I knew of any such groups in the U.S. I couldn’t find any. But Thrainn planted the seed and put me into the support business.
Active surveillance—co-existing with prostate cancer with close monitoring—is a hard sell after generations of us having been brainwashed that we needed cancer treated and removed ASAP.
The concept of support groups devoted to AS also was a hard sell.
The so-called “prostate cancer warriors” saw us prostate cancer patients all as one big happy family of survivors. I got pushback from some who couldn’t see that AS patients needed their own place in the support sun.
We needed respect even though support and research funding was in short supply for us “Rodney Dangerfields” in the world of treat-and-cure prostate cancer dominated.
I encouraged a mash-up with Active Surveillance Patients International (ASPI), a fledgling support and education group, and AnCan Foundation, which had created several virtual support groups for men with prostate cancer and also in recent years for other conditions.
I never intended to be a moderator. Not for me. But that’s what happened as the group grew from once a month to twice a month to four times a month. (The first four Wednesdays at 8 p.m.)
Other AS-only groups also launched AS programs, such as Mike Scott’s old New Prostate Cancer InfoLink—the first blog on AS—(which shifted over to ABC Cancer with Jan Minarette), MaleCare, Inspire.com, Prostate Cancer Support Canada, and probably others I don’t know about.
Some history on Mike Scott:
It was an idea whose time had come, oases of support for men with low-risk prostate cancer.
I am still involved. But recently I have been feeling a bit like an imposter. “Imposterism” is a real psychological phenomenon. Was I having a bout, like the Norton character in Fight Club?
Two urologists have told me I have low-risk “microscopic” prostate cancer, which has not been seen in an MRI or biopsy in 13 years. These doctors have followed me on AS, insisting I have cancer but describing it as “lame” and “wimpy.” Those are their words and scientific appraisals.
Eight insurance companies took this lame cancer seriously. They outright rejected my applications for term-life coverage because I am on AS and had declined treatment.
Again no respect.
Because I follow AS lite at this point, only monitoring my condition with an annual PSA, some pathologists and urologists don’t consider me to be on AS--though my own urologist does] tell me I am on AS. The stick-to-the-book doctors say I am “not in compliance,” an imposter again. Dr. Kevin Ginsburg, who heads the active surveillance effort for the MUSIC group in the Mitten State, says the “intent” of my doctor to surveil me is what counts in determining the status of active surveillance.
I attended a support meeting, where a moderator ribbed me about having “a fake cancer” or “faux cancer.”
Then, I got a letter from “Anon.” (see below), who told me I wasn’t a member of “the club.” He questioned how I could be a “spokesman” for prostate cancer.
I see his point, though I never claimed to be a spokesman for anyone but myself.
I did take Anon.’s criticism to heart. He is a 69-year-old man with more advanced cancer.
You can read his email and my response. I’d be interested in what you have to say though I urge civility whatever side you take.
Howard Wolinsky
Still on the AS Island for now
Anon.’s original email:
Hey Howard,
Love your writing, but given that - by your own account - you've been cancer-free for 13 years, on what basis do you position yourself as a spokesperson for men with prostate cancer? You're just a guy who (essentially) never had prostate cancer (other than a microscopic speck that was never seen again).
Lots of men are dealing with truly cancerous lesions in the prostate. You're not a member of that "club."
Thanks,
Anon.
My response:
Great points, Anon.
It feels like you're reading my mind.
I do feel at times I should never have been diagnosed. I had a prostate day in December 2010 and had a life-altering cancer diagnosis.
Today, I might not have been diagnosed as I was in 2010 before the widespread use of MRIs and before there was more care in ordering biopsies.
But once they put that cancer label on you, you can't get rid of it--unless perhaps you undergo surgery or radiation.
There was a psychological impact when I was diagnosed initially. Who knew what a Gleason 6 was? My first urologist wanted to do surgery--within a week.
There was--and is--too much over-diagnosis and over-treatment of this disease.
On my first biopsy and subsequent ones following the diagnosis, no cancer was seen.
What did that mean?
I thought it meant I was cancer-free.
My (truly enlightened) urologic oncologist didn't think so. He suspected I had "hidden" cancer.
Three additional biopsies and one MRI found nada.
My PSA level has been stable--even as I have aged a decade and more.
The experts say I have a near-zero chance at this point to develop an advanced cancer.
My term-life insurance company and seven other insurers thought I had cancer because I opted not to treat a single lesion. They declined me coverage. They no longer offered me favorable rates because I elected not to treat my so-called cancer.
I was still a cancer patient in their eyes.
I was able to negotiate a deal with my original insurer, a lousy deal. My premium was a flat $200/month but the death benefit was reduced from $600,000 to $100,000.
So how can I claim to be a "spokesman" for men with prostate cancer?
I don't. I speak for myself. If anyone listens, that's their choice.
I got involved in sharing information about active surveillance in 2010 after I started writing about my experiences in Facebook, and friends sent husbands, sons, uncles, and friends to me to hear about AS as an option.
Maybe 6% of men with low-risk prostate cancer in those days went on AS. I suspected they weren't being told about their options, or they didn't understand that AS, prostatectomy and radiation had the same mortality rates 10 years out. So why risk ruining your lifestyle with impotence or incontinence when you could live with this cancer?
(Now, 60% of US patients with low-risk prostate lesions go on AS. It is a revolution in care thanks to more educated doctors and patients and support groups. But it is well below the 90% -plus in Michigan, Sweden and the United Kingdom.)
MedPage Today in 2016 asked me to write a blog about my experiences as a "cancer patient." I was hesitant to do so. I didn't think I'd be telling physicians anything they didn't know.
But I guess I was wrong. Almost eight years later, the blog still lives.
Prostate cancer patients call themselves. the "reluctant brotherhood." I am as reluctant as anyone.
The American Society for Clinical Oncology in 2017 invited me based on my blog to be the first patient to speak at their Genitourinary Congress
Then, they forgot to call on me. I grabbed the microphone and went on a spontaneous, seven-minute rant about what was wrong with this picture and how doctors were not listening to patients. I wrote about this experience as did others in the audience. It sparked a movement to educate patients about AS.
This led to my helping to form two support groups (reluctantly) for men with low-risk prostate cancer--the Rodney Dangerfields of the prostate cancer world, who did not fit into meetings of men with advanced cancer.
These men thought--incorrectly in most cases--that they automatically were going to end up in the same place as men with advanced disease.
I am not the sort of person who ordinarily would join a support group. But I saw a need and working with others started support groups.
I have been able along with colleagues to guide men, especially with lower-risk disease, to find the option that works for them. With various webinars with top experts in the field, I hope we have educated men about this disease.
I started a newsletter, TheActiveSurveillor.com, to try to reach a broader audience and share what I have learned in 13 years on this path.
If I am a spokesman, I am a reluctant spokesman. I think I can help men with low-risk disease. I don't pretend that I am a member of the "club" of men with advanced prostate cancer though some subscribe to my newsletter. I have learned over the years that many of the strongest supporters of AS are men who have undergone treatment.
HW
POSTSCRIPT:
After an exchange of emails, Anon. changed his opinion: “Thanks for that thoughtful explanation, Howard. I'm persuaded: We're in the same boat.”
He’s been treated and added: “I'll never leave the AS clubhouse. So I agree we're in this together.”
I appreciated his open mind. We are on different ends of the prostate cancer spectrum. Admittedly, it can be hard to see the other person’s POV.
I don’t want to bash Anon. at all. I’m a big boy and can take criticism, but I am interested in the views of others. I shared the emails with a few people.
Michael Leapman, MD, a Yale urologic oncologist and TAS columnist, wrote: “Interesting exchange. These are very personal matters, my own 2 cents is that this diagnosis affects people in very different ways. Most patients who hear the ‘C word’ register it as a very significant experience, and live with the specter of cancer. There are lots (millions?) just like you with low-risk prostate cancer who are trying to navigate these waters so you have a very important story to tell.”
Amen. Don’t talk about Fight Club. But do join us in Support Club.
Don’t miss webinar on AI
Join ASPI for a webinar I organized, “How AI will Prevent Overdiagnosis and Overtreatment of Prostate Cancer” at noon-1:30 pm Eastern, Saturday, February 24. There will be top panelists talking about how AI will be used to help patients decide whether to go on Active Surveillance or whether they need Androgen Deprivation Therapy if they are going from AS to radiation treatment. Click on the registration link at the bottom: https://aspatients.org/event/how-ai-will-decrease-overdiagnosis-and-overtreatment-of-prostate-cancer/
(Also, President Biden gets a “State of the Union” message. But I may have him beat with my “Prostate of The Union” on NPR’s “Today Explained” with Noel King. Give it a listen:
Please note the NPR podcast: https://open.substack.com/pub/howardwolinsky/p/news-out-of-the-asco-meeting-new?r=4ah4&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
Apple News/Vox ran a version.
No excuses. What’re you waiting for? Sign up for ZERO support group on AS in March.
By Howard Wolinsky
For the past three years, I have run a special Active Surveillance support group for ZERO. Last year, our virtual support meeting drew 60 patients to talk about AS. By far, it was the biggest session of any at the annual ZERO Summit.
Be there or be square: 11 a.m. Eastern on March 12, 2024.
Register in advance for this free meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUsfuqgrjIoG9AWf7voMhzT_UjdqbQQbQPA Send questions ahead to:
Tom,.
First. Don't talk about Fight Club.
Sounds like you may have gone to a support group for the full spectrum of patients.
Let me know.
Back in 2017 I helped start support groups focused on AS.
The problem was low-risk guys didn't fit in well usually with guys who were treated.
Let me know. But again, don't talk about Fight Club.
Howard
Good reading the column about the Defense Secretary and the “Fight Club”. I had attended a support group and have been reflecting on what I had experienced. I had no idea what PRAD was. There were other stories of biopsy’s done. I heard little of the emotional stress on AS guys. There seemed to be a need to relate treatments. Since I have only had one biopsy, one MRI, and a couple of digital exams, and I had little interest in the details of each. Am I scared of prostate cancer, not really. I am 73 and am looking at living the best I can as long as I can without extensive medical care. I have signed a DNR. Today is it, yesterday is history, and tomorrow’s a mystery. Live on!