UT Health Science Center -- Cancer Treatment Research Center (CTRC)

September 09, 2014


UT Health Science Center -- Cancer Treatment Research Center (CTRC)
San Antonio, TX. The latest stop on Team Draft's national campaign to Change the Face of Lung Cancer will be the University of Texas Health Science Center - Cancer Treatment Research Center  (CTRC). Team Draft will sit down with Dr. Wehbe and the rest of the UT lung cancer team and discuss the state of lung cancer in Southwest Texas. 

Since Chris and Keasha launched Team Draft at their wedding in November of 2011, Team Draft has been on a mission to tackle cancer. Team Draft’s national campaign to raise public awareness and share the hope that now exists for those diagnosed with the disease has taken us to over 100  of the top cancer research and treatment facilities in North America.

“Our hope is not only to positively impact research funding, but to improve the quality of life for those affected by lung cancer,” says Draft. “We aren’t fighting against lung cancer, we’re fighting for people. That’s why we are leading this national campaign to change the face of lung cancer.”

The Facts About Lung Cancer
For decades, the facts regarding lung cancer have been sobering:
• Anyone can get lung cancer.
• Over 60% of lung cancers are diagnosed in people who never smoked or in former smokers.1
• Lung cancer surpassed breast cancer as the #1 cancer killer for women in 1987.2
• Lung cancer kills more people than any other cancer3
, and takes more lives than breast, cervical, and prostate cancers . . . combined.
4
• The five year survival rate for lung cancer is just 16%—a rate that has changed very little since
the 1970’s.5

But now there is HOPE! The use of state-of-the-art lung cancer screening techniques is reducing mortality rates by 20% in some patient groups6 while cutting-edge team-based, multidisciplinary treatment procedures are improving the quality of life for lung cancer patients across the country. And thanks to advances in molecular tumor mutation testing, researchers and treating physicians are developing effective personal lung cancer treatments designed to extent and, ultimately, save lives.7 The key to making even greater strides is funding, but funding for lung cancer research is impacted by the “smoker’s disease” stigma.8 That’s why Team Draft is campaigning to change the face of lung cancer.