The fog of cancer, secrecy, and the right to privacy: Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin's 'lapse of judgment' reverberates
Does he wear a suit or remain in his shorty gown while sending out drones?
By Howard Wolinsky
Amid a battle, there is a state of confusion about the enemy’s maneuvers and strengths and weaknesses.
It’s called the “fog of war.”
The exact phrase first was used in an 1896 book titled The Fog of War by Sir Lonsdale Augustus Hale, where it is described as "the state of ignorance in which commanders frequently find themselves as regards the real strength and position, not only of their foes, but also of their friends."
And now we have Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, who for whatever reason—The stigma of cancer? A need to maintain a strong, macho image?—and his Pentagon colleagues who have created a fog of prostate cancer that created a huge policy debate.
It isn’t the anesthesia that caused the fog from his initial secret operation, which Austin withheld from his boss, President Biden, on December 22, or his hospitalization on January 1 for rare surgical side effects, extensive abdominal infections. Then, the secret prostatectomy and subsequent infection hit the fan.
President Biden, the Commander in Chief, was kept out of the loop for three days. He told the press that Pentagon top dog Austin had a “lapse in judgment” but he still had confidence in his #2.
(As of this writing, Austin is still in the hospital, and there is no indication of when he will be leaving the hospital.)
The Pentagon knows the fog of war well but has contributed to the fog of cancer.
In a press conference, the Pentagon PR Major General took great care to avoid the minefields of medical jargon and triggered a policy and national security debate. The Pentagon spread quite a bit of mist by withholding information and using imprecise, confusing, and foggy language.
The New York Times summed up this kerfuffle nicely: “The episode has raised questions about Mr. Austin’s personal credibility as well as his department’s overall competence. The Defense Department’s shifting stories, put forth by junior officials seeking to protect their boss, have not helped matters. The stark breach of protocol has also lessened the credibility of the Pentagon as a whole, lawmakers and current and former American officials said, with both the White House and Congress.”
The Pentagon, for instance, created a stir by saying Austin’s surgery was “elective,” calling up images of nose jobs and facelift.
The reality is quite different. Robotic surgery is called minimally invasive compared to an open operation it largely has replaced.
But even with robotics, a prostatectomy is a three-to-four-hour bloody in which a patient is placed under general anesthesia, which has risks of its own, as the patient is hung upside down like a bat in a cave.
“It is major cancer surgery,” Dr. Judd Moul, a professor of urology at Duke who was previously a surgeon at Walter Reed, told the New York Times.
And the complications that followed Mr. Austin’s surgery were extensive, as his time in intensive care made clear, said Dr. Herbert Lepor, a professor of urology at the New York University School of Medicine. “He’s in intensive care. He still is not home.”
Many urologists—not all—wouldn’t have operated on a man in his 70s, especially one who apparently is out of shape. Experts informed me that patients like Austin face an increased risk of post-operative heart attacks plus some risks from anesthesia.
Meanwhile, the Pentagon’s flacks are indulging in imaging building, painting a picture of Austin as a man of action even as he recuperates in his hospital room, which they stress serves an advanced communications center like one when he travels. They say he is calling out strikes on terrorists and watching events unfold live on a TV feed. A real remote-control Rambo.
Associated Press said: “From his hospital room, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin first orchestrated and then watched in real-time as the U.S. retaliatory attack on Yemen-based Houthi militants unfolded Thursday night.
“Austin’s hospital-room leadership was the latest in a series of actions the defense chief has carried out from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he has been recovering from complications due to treatments for prostate cancer. Austin only revealed he had prostate cancer on Tuesday — the same day that the Houthis launched their most aggressive onslaught to date of 18 drones and missiles at commercial and military vessels in the Red Sea. That attack that set the stage for Thursday’s military operation.”
An impertinent question or two: Should a man recuperating from a prostatectomy be calling the shots from his hospital room? Is he so indispensable that his deputy couldn’t direct attacks? (On the other hand, Austin kept his operation a secret from his deputy.)
I wonder when he calls in the drones if he dresses up in his blue business suit and tie, or if he wears a shorty hospital gown from his hospital room command center at Walter Reed.
Inquiring minds want to know
I contacted Walter Reed, where Austin is hospitalized, with a list of questions.
At the top of the list was the key question: What was Austin’s Gleason score?
This information should tell the tale on whether the best choices were made for treatment. I asked for an interview with his urologists.
I also asked:
--What was Austin’s PSA blood level?
--What was his cancer volume, number of cores affected, his PSA density?
--What were his PI-RADS from MRIs?
--Does he have a family history of prostate cancer?
I crossed my fingers and whispered a silent prayer to the press gods.
The Reagan shooting
Getting a response on such matters is not unheard of. I covered the assassination attempt on President Reagan on March 29, 1981. I remember it well. It was my first day on the job at the Chicago Sun-Times. I had a front-page story—plus overtime.
Back then, George Washington Medical Center held press briefings with Reagan’s doctors. (I can tell you now a number of lies were told—supposedly in the national interest. But that’s a story for another day.)
The Pentagon and Walter Reed circled their wagons and tried to control their messaging. I got bupkes on Austin. But I had to ask.
The duty officer told me: “Please see the attached statement from Walter Reed and the transcript from yesterday’s press briefing is posted at: https://www.defense.gov/News/Transcripts/Transcript/Article/3640398/pentagon-press-secretary-maj-gen-pat-ryder-holds-a-press-briefing/.
We do not have any details beyond what is included in the statement and transcript.”
Here’s the statement:
Media Colleagues-
See below for an update on Sec. Austin’s current condition.
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Statement from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Officials on Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III’s Medical Care
Jan. 9, 2024
Dr. John Maddox, Trauma Medical Director, and Dr. Gregory Chesnut, Center for Prostate Disease Research of the Murtha Cancer Center Director, at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland, provided the following statement today regarding Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III’s medical care:
As part of Secretary Austin’s routinely recommended health screening, he has undergone regular prostate specific antigen (PSA) surveillance. Changes in his laboratory evaluation in early December 2023 identified prostate cancer which required treatment. On December 22, 2023, after consultation with his medical team, he was admitted to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center and underwent a minimally invasive surgical procedure called a prostatectomy to treat and cure prostate cancer. He was under general anesthesia during this procedure. Secretary Austin recovered uneventfully from his surgery and returned home the next morning. His prostate cancer was detected early, and his prognosis is excellent.
On January 1st, 2024, Secretary Austin was admitted to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center with complications from the December 22 procedure, including nausea with severe abdominal, hip, and leg pain. Initial evaluation revealed a urinary tract infection. On January 2, the decision was made to transfer him to the ICU for close monitoring and a higher level of care. Further evaluation revealed abdominal fluid collections impairing the function of his small intestines. This resulted in the back up of his intestinal contents which was treated by placing a tube through his nose to drain his stomach. The abdominal fluid collections were drained by non-surgical drain placement. He has progressed steadily throughout his stay. His infection has cleared. He continues to make progress and we anticipate a full recovery although this can be a slow process. During this stay, Secretary Austin never lost consciousness and never underwent general anesthesia.
Prostate cancer is the most common cause of cancer among American men, and it impacts 1 in every 8 men – and 1 in every 6 African American men - during their lifetime. Despite the frequency of prostate cancer, discussions about screening, treatment, and support are often deeply personal and private ones. Early screening is important for detection and treatment of prostate cancer and people should talk to their doctors to see what screening is appropriate for them.
The New York Times said: “In finally releasing the details of the ailment that had taken Mr. Austin — second only to the president in the military chain of command — out of action during crises in the Middle East and Ukraine, the Pentagon sought to fix its own unforced error. Mr. Austin had tried to protect his medical privacy; instead, his secrecy inflated the hospitalization into a full-blown national security crisis.”
The cancer part
Meanwhile, NBC asks: Is surgery for prostate cancer considered an elective procedure?
They answer: Simply put, any surgery that’s not needed very quickly to treat a medical emergency is considered an elective procedure.
Operations to treat appendicitis or ruptured gallbladders, for example, are emergency procedures, Dr. Edward Schaeffer, the director of the Polsky Urologic Cancer Institute and chair of urology at Northwestern Medicine in Chicago, told NBC.
An elective procedure doesn’t mean the surgery is optional, but rather that it can be scheduled in advance, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.
So, why was there a rush to robotics?
With elective surgery, “it doesn’t matter if we do it today or six weeks from now,” said Dr. Michael Stifelman, the chair of urology at Hackensack University Medical Center in New Jersey. “The outcome will be the same.”
That’s especially the case for surgery for prostate cancer, which Stifelman said is “truly an elective procedure.”
“Prostate cancer is such a slow-growing cancer in many, many cases," he said. "You can easily wait four to six weeks before treating that patient for the cancer without any concern of changing the outcome.”
If we knew Austin’s Gleason score and other data, we could better understand the rush to surgery.
Was active surveillance an option? Again we don’t know because we don’t have the data.
Dr. Charles Ryan, a medical oncologist and CEO of the Prostate Cancer Foundation, told NBC that patients diagnosed early have several options.
“Should I do active surveillance, which means having repeat MRI scans followed with blood tests? Or should I have my prostate removed surgically? Or should I undergo a treatment with radiation and hormonal therapy or radiation alone?” Ryan said.
Because prostate cancer can grow very slowly, some doctors and patients may decide to withhold treatment and instead opt for either active surveillance or watchful waiting. Both involve monitoring the cancer with tests, with active surveillance being the more intensive version.
Monitoring prostate cancer rather than treating it might be recommended if the cancer isn’t causing symptoms, it is small and it hasn’t spread beyond the prostate, or it is expected to grow slowly, according to the American Cancer Society.
"The ideal candidate for that is somebody who’s younger, in their 50s, 60s or early 70s, with a cancer that is very small," said Dr. Quoc-Dien Trinh, co-director of the Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women’s Prostate Cancer Center in Boston. Such a patient might need periodic blood tests to check PSA levels, or additional biopsies and MRIs, Trinh said.
BTW, vets tell me that urologists at Walter Reed have a reputation for being surgery-happy compared with colleagues in the civilian world who may have recommended radiation therapy for the 70+ crowd if aggressive treatment were needed.)
Most men who are diagnosed with prostate cancer don’t die from it, the American Cancer Society says.
Risks from surgery?
While Austin experienced complications from his surgery, experts said that, in general, the procedure is very safe.
“For the vast, vast majority of men who go through it, it’s an uncomplicated procedure,” Ryan said. “But, as with all surgical procedures, as with all cancer treatments, there are risks from time to time for complications that require further care.”
Ryan said complications that would lead to a patient’s being hospitalized, such as bleeding or an infection, are rare. “By rare, [I mean] less than 5% of cases,” he said.
If he hadn’t been hospitalized a second time for complications, could Austin have pulled off this caper? I wonder.
Earlier Austin story:
Join me Wednesday at Your Prostate Cancer.help virtual meeting for AS patients
By Howard Wolinsky
Jan Manarite runs a wonderful support group on Active Surveillance. She has her own special style and digs in to help men.
I used to attend her meetings all the time.
But because of a family emergency, she missed her latest meeting.
I volunteered to fill in for Jan at 4-5 p.m. Eastern Wednesday, January 17.
Just click into Zoom at: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85839374146?pwd=S05OUE52Q2JlNSs1Nkw4Y3VBSjEvdz09
Hope I’ll see you there.Join the ASPI webinar on genomics on Jan. 27
Don’t miss an ASPI program on genetics and prostate cancer
Active Surveillance Patients International is holding a webinar on genomics at 12-1:30 p.m. January 27.
Christina Nakamoto, Medical Science Liaison for Urology at Myriad Genetics, will discuss the benefits of medical-grade, genetic tests and how testing can provide personalized information about a patient's prostate cancer in facilitating an informed shared decision-making process between the patient and his medical team on Active Surveillance and/or other treatment options. Michael Glode, MD, who serves on ASPI's Medical Advisory Committee, will join the discussion and field questions during a Q &A session. Send your questions in advance to contactus@aspatients.org.
While we’re at it: Join the ZERO support group on AS in March—I need your support
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. It was by far the biggest session of any at the annual ZERO Summit.
So sign up now and join us at 11 a.m. Eastern March 12, 2024.
Register in advance for this meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUsfuqgrjIoG9AWf7voMhzT_UjdqbQQbQPA
A couple of things. First once diagnosed, Austin could have let the President know what his intentions were. Second, Post surgery when complications set in, he was in crisis and no expectation to let others know.
From an anonymous reader re mhy line on Austin: "as the patient is hung upside down like a bat in a cave.”
There was a time, near when I was “volunteered” to serve in Vietnam, that I would have found the image of a 4 star general hanging from the ceiling while a robot removed his reproductive organs amusing.
However, now that the Epstein pathology community has filled me with doubt, this does nothing to relieve my anxiety!