Brkg House Majority Leader Steve Scalise diagnosed with blood cancer

nwillitts

Veteran Member
MSN


BREAKING NEWS: House Majority Leader Steve Scalise diagnosed with blood cancer

ABC News

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise diagnosed with blood cancer​








House Majority Leader Steve Scalise announced Tuesday he has been diagnosed with a "very treatable blood cancer" and has started treatment.
"After a few days of not feeling like myself this past week, I had some blood work done," the Louisiana Republican said in a statement. "The results uncovered some irregularities and after undergoing additional tests, I was diagnosed with Multiple Myeloma, a very treatable blood cancer."
Scalise said the treatment will continue for the next several months, and he expects to return to Washington and continue working as the No. 2 Republican in the House.
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"I am incredibly grateful we were able to detect this early and that this cancer is treatable," Scalise said. "I am thankful for my excellent medical team, and with the help of God, support of my family, friends, colleagues, and constituents, I will tackle this with the same strength and energy as I have tackled past challenges."

Colleagues on both sides of the aisle offered well wishes for Scalise after the announcement.

"Steve is as tough and kind as they come, and he has beaten so many unbeatable odds," House Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik wrote on social media. "The Legend from Louisiana is beloved by his colleagues and America and we know he will fight this next battle with that same resolve."

Scalise has served Louisiana's 1st Congressional District since 2008 and was elected majority leader after Republicans regained majority control of the House in the 2022 midterm elections.

The congressman previously recovered from life-threatening injuries after a gunman opened fire at a Congressional Baseball Game practice in 2017.

Scalise was struck in the hip and went through a series of surgeries to recover.

"I think about just how lucky we all are, lucky to be alive," Scalise told Fox News during this year's Congressional Baseball Game.
 

Fly Girl

Veteran Member
In oncology terms, there is no such thing as cure. You can at best hope to reach something called a CR1-NED status. That stands for complete remission one with no evidence of disease. It essentially means you’re cured but you will never be called that in medical terms. I know this because I had stage four non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma six years ago. I reached CR one NED and was told that will be my medical status until I am 100 years old! For everything I went through, I will take it! The day the oncologist walked into my hospital room to give me the definitive diagnosis, he said it was nasty, aggressive, and rapid onset with rapid growth but if I stuck with him he was pretty sure he could make it go away because it was highly treatable. And he use that term highly treatable. Prayers go out for Steve!
 
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