9/3/24

2024 National Hereditary Cancer Week Posters

2024 Hereditary Cancer Week (September 29 - October 5, 2024) & Previvor Day (October 2, 2024) posters. One highlighting the Hereditary Cancer Community’s 24/7 efforts to share knowledge, raise awareness, help prevent cancer, and save lives. And one highlighting that Hereditary Cancer is Preventable.
The story of two posters…
One to raise awareness about the hereditary cancer community. And one to make a point that there are ways to prevent hereditary cancer in spite of some medical policies and practices still stuck in the last century. (More about that in upcoming posts.)

Please share. And you can download PDFs at: genetionary.org

8/28/24

Promoting Childhood Literacy & Preventing Ovarian Cancer?

Young woman holding an Amy Krouse Rosenthal Foundation yellow umbrella.
Providing funding for ovarian cancer early detection research AND childhood literacy programs, the Amy Krouse Rosenthal Foundation is a very special organization honoring a very special human being.

With a daughter (holding the umbrella) at risk of ovarian cancer because of an inherited genetic mutation and with me being a children’s book illustrator, I support the AKR Foundation wholeheartedly.

With National Ovarian Cancer Awareness Month coming up in September, it’s a perfect time to support the 2024 Yellow Umbrella Campaign.

Please learn more about Amy and the AKR Foundation at: www.amykrouserosenthalfoundation.org

Please join me in supporting the Foundation’s annual Yellow Umbrella Campaign here: 
www.amykrouserosenthalfoundation.org/campaign

8/13/24

Total Unique BRCA Variants Charted

Infographic Pie Chart showing known germline brca mutations. BRCA means BReast CAncer Tumor Suppressor Genes. Everybody has BRCA1 and BRCA2 tumor suppressor genes. They produce proteins that help repair damaged DNA and prevent cancer. Inherited pathogenic mutations in these genes are linked to an increased risk of various types of cancer, including breast (men and women), ovarian, prostate, melanoma, pancreatic, and other cancers.    Expert-classified as pathogenic: 4,905 Expert-classified as benign: 1,363   Expert-classified as likely benign: 1,182 Not yet reviewed: 65,007 (89.7%)  Total unique BRCA mutations: 72,467 (BRCA1: 35,598    BRCA2: 36,869)  Infographic by Mark A. Hicks, www.genetionary.org Source: BRCA Exchange, www.BRCAexchange.org

“It’s probably not that simple.” And “BRCA mutations are rare.” That is what I was told by my late wife’s doctor when my wife was first diagnosed with cancer. I was pushing for my wife to have genetic testing because of her family’s cancer history and a second-degree relative’s recently-provided positive BRCA2 mutation report. Her doctor was hesitant but eventually agreed to refer my wife for testing.

It was that simple.

My wife had inherited a BRCA2 mutation (which our daughter also inherited) and was diagnosed with Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer Syndrome. Had her relative’s report not been kept unshared for seven years, it would have saved her life.

And “rare.”?

This infographic represents only BRCA genes. To date, there are about 50 other genes associated with hereditary cancer syndromes. And that’s just the number of genes, not the total number of mutations possible.

Look at the chart and do the math. It will be eye-opening.

Please share. Knowledge is power. Hereditary cancer can be prevented.


 

8/1/24

The Thinking Cap & EducatorClips.com

Thinking Cap clipart. A whimsical depiction of a child in a thinking cap with a lightbulb illuminated with a speech bubble that says, “Whoa!” The artwork can be download for free use at www.EducatorClips.com. Use restrictions apply.As a freelance illustrator, sometimes something you create takes on a life of its own* and you see it being used all over the place. With it getting to be back-to-school time, I thought I’d share this.

This particular piece of art was created many years ago for the Discovery (Channel) Education Clip Art Gallery. I often see it (and rip-offs of it) as well as a lot of the hundreds of other pieces of clip art from the Gallery I created. I even saw some of my clip art being used at the chemotherapy infusion center where my late wife was being treated for metastatic hereditary cancer. Which, I might add, was actually heartbreaking on many levels.

Way back in 1999, there were basically no free online clip art galleries for educators, so Discovery licensed my whimsical collection for exclusive use. I had originally created much of the clip art for my elementary school teacher wife to use in the classroom and in newsletters to parents. Discovery used my clip art collection for twenty years until the contract expired and they changed their focus. However, since I still owned all rights to the artwork, I created my own website where the art can be downloaded for use by educators gratis at www.EducatorClips.com

If you want to learn more about the history of my clip art, please visit the site. And if you ever want to see how others are using the posted image, just do a “thinking cap” image web search.

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*As you might imagine, my Thinking Cap art is just one of numerous creations to take on lives of their own. And sometimes it can be very frustrating. My Chartpak International Typeface Competition winner, La Fiesta (aka Tijuana), is an example of that.


7/11/24

The Medical Brain Trust and Germline Mutations

 Cartoon about medical policy, germline mutations, hereditary cancer, and the duty to warn.

Unfortunately, genomic science is far ahead of the maturity it takes to use its life-saving capabilities effectively. Every gene sequencing report with a pathogenic variant identified that I have seen clearly states in one way or another that other family members may be at risk. Yet, it’s still considered an individual issue, where the sharing of very complex information with other family members is left to the patient, regardless of their ability to do so. Tell me, how does that make sense? How is that ethical?


Nobody should die of a preventable cancer. Nobody!

The cartoon can also be viewed in a larger format at https://markix.net/brain/

6/13/24

Celebrating Previvorship on Father's Day

 
 

I celebrate Previvor Day every day, but more so on Father’s Day.

For those unfamiliar with the term, a previvor is someone who has not been diagnosed with cancer but is at a higher risk for cancer due to certain inherited genetic mutations (BRCA1, BRCA2, CHEK2, ATM, PALB2, TP53, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, etc., etc.). Being a previvor does not mean you will get hereditary cancer; there are ways to reduce the risk. But those choices can be life-altering.

My daughter is a previvor.

Imagine being in your 20s and watching your mother die a horrific death caused by a pathogenic genetic mutation that you had just recently learned that you also carry. Then having to face all the life-changing medical decisions and procedures to reduce your cancer risk without your beloved mother by your side. That takes exceptional courage.

Genomic science has given my child, who has grown into a kind, creative, and confident scientist, a chance to live a full life cancer-free, something her mother did not get. Because of laws and attitudes still stuck in the last century, information that would have saved her mother’s life did not get shared.

Father’s Day gives me another opportunity to advocate for hereditary cancer awareness and prevention. And prevention starts with knowing and sharing family health/cancer history — both maternal AND paternal.

Everyone has tumor suppressor genes like BRCA (BReast CAncer) 1 and 2. Mutations in those
and other genes can cause many different cancers. And knowing that genetic mutations can be passed down for generations from fathers as well as mothers can be life-saving.  

Happy Father’s Day to all the fathers of previvors.

Life is fragile. Knowledge is power.


6/6/24

A Website About Genes, Genetic Mutations, and Hereditary Cancer

Screenshot of www.genetionary.org, a Website About Genes, Genetic Mutations, and Hereditary Cancer.



When I was my late wife's cancer caregiver, I often found myself trying to explain to others about her diagnosis, how her cancer could have been prevented, and how our adult child ended up with the exact same BRCA2 mutation as her mother. But I quickly realized that many people lack a basic understanding of genetics, genetic inheritance, and cancer. So, being an illustrator with decades of experience creating educational materials, I started drawing pictures to help explain it.  

I felt what I had illustrated needed to be shared, so I created Genetionary.org, an ad-free site with a simple genetic mutation glossary, my infographics, and materials for sharing family health history. It’s just a simple site with a simple focus: to help raise awareness about hereditary cancer and how it can be prevented. 


My soul mate of 40 years died horribly and needlessly because information wasn’t shared. Nobody should die of a preventable cancer. Nobody!


Please share.