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Kirby Evans, a cancer survivor, said he was forced to leave a restaurant because of his disfigured face.
Kirby Evans, a cancer survivor, said he was forced to leave a restaurant because of his disfigured face.
Photo: GoFundMe
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What you need to know about cancer immunotherapy
It's all natural
Instead of attacking cancer cells directly, as with chemotherapy or radiation therapy, cancer immunotherapy works with the patient's immune system to attack cancer cells. It uses natural or synthetic substances to artificially stimulate or guide the body's ability to fight cancer.
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What you need to know about cancer immunotherapy
It's all natural
Instead of directly attacking cancer cells, as with chemotherapy or radiation therapy, cancer immunotherapy works with the patient's immune system
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Photo: Marie D. De Jesus, staff member
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This is the first real breakthrough in cancer treatment for decades.
The Cancer Research Institute states that "cancer immunotherapy" represents the most promising new cancer treatment approach since the development of the first chemotherapies in the 1940s.
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This is the first real breakthrough in cancer treatment for decades.
Cancer Research Institute says cancer immunotherapy "represents the most promising new approach to treating cancer since
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Photo: Bettmann / Bettmann Archives
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There are different types of cancer immunotherapy
Cancer immunotherapy helps the immune system fight off cancer cells, which it is normally hard to do. Scientists have come up with a number of methods to strengthen the body's defense, including the injection of antibodies, medications that help the immune system recognize cancer cells as a threat and even of cancer vaccines.
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There are different types of cancer immunotherapy
Cancer immunotherapy helps the immune system fight off cancer cells, which it is normally hard to do. Scientists have developed a number of
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Photo: Elaine Thompson, STF
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It does not discriminate
Cancer immunotherapy has shown promise in treating various forms of cancer, including cancers of the brain, breast and skin, according to the Cancer Research Institute. Until now, there are five different classes of immunotherapies that can treat more than 20 different types of cancer.
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It does not discriminate
Cancer immunotherapy has shown promise in treating various forms of cancer, including cancers of the brain, breast and skin, according to the Cancer Research Institute. Until now, there is
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Photo: Associated Press
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It's an advanced treatment for cancer, but the research has centuries-old roots
In the 1890s, William Coley, an American surgeon and cancer researcher, managed to treat a cancer patient by injecting a streptococcal bacteria into his egg-sized tumor. The tumor is dissolved in a few weeks, saving the patient's life. Despite the incredible discoveries, Coley's work was considered too unpredictable: two of her patients died as a result of the injection. It would take decades of work to understand the relationship between the injected bacteria, the tumor and the response of the immune system.
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It's an advanced treatment for cancer, but the research has centuries-old roots
In the 1890s, William Coley, an American surgeon and researcher in the field of cancer, successfully treated a cancer patient by injecting
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Photo: William Bradley Coley
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It offers long-term protection
Unlike other types of cancer treatment, immunotherapy offers long-term protection aimed at permanently preventing tumor cells in the body.
Since immunotherapy works with the body's immune system, the memory of the body can recognize the cancer threats that it has previously attacked, even for years. In this way, even dormant cancer cells are not able to cause a relapse of the patient.
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It offers long-term protection
Unlike other types of cancer treatment, immunotherapy offers long-term protection aimed at permanently preventing tumor cells in the body.
Since immunotherapy works with
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Photo: BSIP / UIG Via Getty Images
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He saved the life of Jimmy Carter
One of the most prominent immunotherapy patients is former US President Jimmy Carter. In August 2015, Carter announced that he was suffering from melanoma, a type of skin cancer that had spread to the brain and liver. Four months later, he was no longer suffering from cancer thanks to three treatments: surgery, radiotherapy and immunotherapy.
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He saved the life of Jimmy Carter
One of the most prominent immunotherapy patients is former US President Jimmy Carter. In August 2015, Carter announced that he was suffering from melanoma, a type of skin
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Photo: Jessica McGowan / Getty Images
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Photo: LIONEL BONAVENTURE / AFP / Getty Images
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Kirby Evans, a cancer survivor, said he was forced to leave a restaurant because of his disfigured face.
Kirby Evans, a cancer survivor, said he was forced to leave a restaurant because of his disfigured face.
Photo: GoFundMe
"Injured so deeply": A cancer survivor claims to have been forced to leave the restaurant because of a disfigured face
A man from South Carolina said that he had been forced to leave a restaurant after a manager had told him that his disfigured face was frightening the customers.
Seven years ago, Kirby Evans, aged 65, said he had the eye and left nose removed during a surgical operation intended to remove basal cell carcinoma, a form of cancer of the skin, reported television by WCIV.
The operation left his face disfigured and Evans said he could not afford to offer a reconstructive surgery.
He is also unable to wear an eye patch because the skin around his eye is sensitive, Evans said.
On October 9, Evans said he entered the Forks Pit Stop restaurant in Walterboro for a donut and a drink.
Shortly after sitting, Evans said that a manager had approached him.
"The next thing I know, she brought me to her office," he told WCIV. "The words that came out of his mouth did me so bad."
Evans said the director told him to cover his face or leave.
"My father was discriminated against because of his appearance," wrote Brandy Evans in a Facebook message describing his father's incident. "He can not help what cancer has done to him."
In a Facebook comment now deleted on this post, the WCIV said that a woman who identified herself as the restaurant manager had written: "I do not see anything wrong with what I've I'm doing kiosks catering at the usual time every day, I have bills to pay and I work very hard to please my clients. "
His daughter has created a GoFundMe page to support him in his goal of raising $ 10,000.