Angie is the smallest girl, sitting next to our mother. Angie would have been around three years old here. |
Angie was a freckled child, with blue eyes and auburn hair. We were California girls and our frequent trips to the beach often left Angie with angry red sunburns that blistered
and peeled. It was the age of Coppertone—the 1960s—when billboards and magazine
ads iconized that cute little girl with the frisky puppy nipping down her
bathing suit bottom to reveal that distinct tan and white demarcation. While
Gidget lived it up under the sun, the rest of the world burned and baked their
skins to achieve the “perfect” tan.
Angie never got that perfect tan. My
parents smeared her down with sunscreen while she compared herself to our older
sister, Robin, and me, who tanned easily. As a teenager outside the watchful
eyes of our parents, Angie tried her skin again at sun tanning. The results
were always the same—scorched skin.
At the age of 15, a mole on Angie’s back began oozing a
clear, sticky substance. The doctor didn’t seem overly concerned, telling my
mother Angie was “too young” for skin cancer, but thought that removal was a
good idea. Following the removal, I remember Angie telling me the doctor said the mole was so deep he couldn’t get it all out. When the biopsy
result came back, it said, “Juvenile. Melanoma. Benign.” The doctor told my mom
there was nothing to worry about.
Years went by. Angie went to college, married, had a son,
and obtained a job as a medical assistant for a large medical group in Southern
California. When she noticed odd swellings in the lymph nodes under her arms,
she received immediate medical attention from her friend and physician for whom
she worked. When a battery of lab tests didn’t identify a source of the
swelling, the doctor decided to remove
the troublesome nodes and do a biopsy.
My sister Angie (28) and her son Jacob (5) 1989. |
The results of that biopsy shocked and dismayed even that
seasoned physician. At age 29, Angie was diagnosed with advanced melanoma—the deadliest
form of skin cancer. What pathologists erroneously deemed “benign” back in
1976 was actually an early malignant melanoma that would raise its hideous
head 13 years later.
By the time my sister’s melanoma was correctly diagnosed in
1990, she had already lived 12 years beyond most advanced melanoma patients.
Perhaps it was her youth, her love of life, or being a mother; or maybe it was the lives of
those she touched and cared for in the clinic which helped her surpass her life expectancy. Nevertheless, it was less than four months from the time of her diagnosis to the day of her passing.
Angie’s premature death at
the age of 29 compelled me to share her story with anyone who has ears to hear.
I know at least one blond-haired, blue-eyed girl who routinely wears her
sunscreen—my own daughter Elisabeth.
Angie would be 51 years old today if the lab at Kaiser had correctly
interpreted the melanoma diagnosis and the doctor had been more proactive about
his own education in skin cancers. You can learn about your own risk for melanoma
or other less deadly forms of skin cancer here:
Melanoma: Melanoma
Research Foundation.
Basal cell or squamous cell: American
Cancer Society.
The majority of this piece was first published in Focus magazine, May 1997.