A D V E R T I S E M E N T
Submitted photo / Sherwood Gazette
Nicholas Getty, an Archer Glen Elementary Student, gets a hug from Eddie the Eagle, the school's mascot.
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Nicholas Getty, who attends Archer Glen Elementary School, looks and acts like any other first-grader at the school, which is a piece of normalcy his parents want to preserve because he has an inoperable brain tumor.
In fact, when Nicholas started kindergarten last year, his parents only told those who needed to know, including administrators and his teacher, so he could just be a normal kid.
However, his parents, Chris Getty and Jennifer Fitch, reluctantly agreed to go public when friends offered to fund-raise to help pay Nick’s medical bills. The family has health insurance, but it doesn’t cover all the expenses of monthly chemotherapy plus multiple medications, doctors’ visits and hospital tests.
Nick, now 7, was born Oct. 7, 2001, and according to Jennifer, “he was never a sick kid.”
Then in the spring of 2006, “he showed signs of a cold,” Jennifer said. “He was fatigued and nauseated. He had a loss of balance and equilibrium problems.
“It was almost like he had a stroke on one side. It happened really fast. Within 1 ½ weeks, he was in intensive care.”
One June 12, 2006, — a date Jennifer will remember forever — Nick was diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor following an MRI.
The diagnosis only came after Jennifer insisted on getting a second opinion after Nick’s primary- care doctor said the symptoms were either caused by a stomach ailment or the child was making it up to get attention.
The second doctor thought Nick’s ears might be infected but ordered the MRI, which showed the tumor, and Nick spent one week at Legacy Emanuel Hospital & Health Center in Portland.
Nick started three months of daily radiation and also began monthly chemotherapy treatments, which he still undergoes.
“They do a scan every other month to monitor the tumor,” Jennifer said Oct. 25. “It has shrunk, and so far, it’s been stable. We’re thinking the chemo is keeping it the same size. Nick was originally supposed to be on chemo for one year.
“He’s in a study, and he’s tolerating it well, so they are continuing the chemo into the second year. He only had a side effect one time, when they raised the dosage, and it was scary. They just raised it again this week.”
The tumor is actually inside Nick’s brain stem, so surgery to remove it is out of the question. “Even a biopsy could kill him,” Jennifer said.
She has researched the condition and learned that it is very rare – it only affects 1,500 to 2,000 children under the age of 12 annually across the country.
“Only 5 percent survive,” Jennifer said. “Most kids only live two to five years. But he’s in a study, and the doctors are gaining knowledge all the time.”
The chemo that Nick takes is an oral drug in pill form, and Jennifer gives it to him monthly.
“It’s such a new medicine that there’s no study of the effects,” Jennifer said. “And who knows what new drugs will come along? We’re ready to try something else new if it becomes available.”
Nick goes to Emanuel once a month for blood work before Jennifer gives him the chemo five days in a row.
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