Silver Strong Cancer Fund
Donation protected
At 16 years old, Jake was like any other child.
He loved going to the beach, surfing, and playing basketball or any sport with his friends. He had just gotten his learner’s permit and was looking forward to getting his license in September.
In his hometown of Ashland, MA Jake was a good student, and the kicker on the high school football team. Football was his passion and he planned on attending Kicking camp this summer, maybe even hoping to be a kicker on a college football team. In addition to playing sports, Jake had also found a passion on the athletic sidelines.
As a volunteer, he was able to use his voice, his high energy and his great sports IQ to announce local high school sports games on cable TV. This summer, the cable TV station offered him a job to learn about show production.
In April 2016, Jake began to experience some pain in his right leg, his kicking leg. It was thought that maybe he had overused or injured the leg doing shot put for the high school track team. After a week of rest there was no improvement. In the past Jake had also suffered from Psoriatic Arthritis so it was thought that maybe the knee pain was a flare-up from this. A visit to his Rheumatologist would prove that his knee pain was not due to a flare up, and so Jake was sent to an orthopedic specialist to work on getting a diagnosis.
On May 3rd, Melissa and Jake met with a specialist in Boston. An x-ray of Jake’s femur showed a suspicious area by his knee and they were told it looked like a healing fracture, so an MRI was ordered. The following Monday, the most dreaded news that any parent can receive was delivered to the family. The doctors said that Jake had a 6.5cm tumor in his knee, and they were worried that this type of tumor could be malignant.
They would need to confirm the diagnosis with a biopsy, and a battery of other tests to see if it had spread. By the end of the week all the tests had been performed and the results confirmed that in his lower right femur, Jake had a cancer called Osteosarcoma. This is a very aggressive form of bone cancer that mainly affects teen aged boys.
Osteosarcoma likes to grow in large bones and metastasize to the lungs. It is a rare cancer and only affects about 400 people a year in the US.
After meeting with a team of oncology and surgical specialists at Dana Farber and Boston Children’s Hospital the family is now gearing up for the fight of a lifetime.
Jake will go through 10 weeks of chemotherapy right through July. Once that is over, he will have surgery to have the cancerous section, along with a portion of his leg bone removed in August. He will need to have his knee reconstructed.
Following the surgery there will be 5 more months of chemotherapy along with rehabilitation. This will involve many visits to Dana Farber and Children’s Hospital, and a lot of tests to closely monitor the spread of this dangerous cancer.
As you can imagine, the expenses for this treatment can add up very quickly. A lifetime of savings can be depleted in a matter of months with each round of chemo, the various tests, the hospital stays for possible transfusions and fevers, and rehabilitation.
Please consider helping our “Silver Strong” Team Jake by donating to our GoFundMe site.
Jake, like so many other kids out there, needs the support of community and friends to battle this cancer.
Together we can make a difference for Jake, his sister Halle, his parents Rob Silver, and Melissa and Tony Duca.
Any donation amount can make a huge difference. Thank You!
He loved going to the beach, surfing, and playing basketball or any sport with his friends. He had just gotten his learner’s permit and was looking forward to getting his license in September.
In his hometown of Ashland, MA Jake was a good student, and the kicker on the high school football team. Football was his passion and he planned on attending Kicking camp this summer, maybe even hoping to be a kicker on a college football team. In addition to playing sports, Jake had also found a passion on the athletic sidelines.
As a volunteer, he was able to use his voice, his high energy and his great sports IQ to announce local high school sports games on cable TV. This summer, the cable TV station offered him a job to learn about show production.
In April 2016, Jake began to experience some pain in his right leg, his kicking leg. It was thought that maybe he had overused or injured the leg doing shot put for the high school track team. After a week of rest there was no improvement. In the past Jake had also suffered from Psoriatic Arthritis so it was thought that maybe the knee pain was a flare-up from this. A visit to his Rheumatologist would prove that his knee pain was not due to a flare up, and so Jake was sent to an orthopedic specialist to work on getting a diagnosis.
On May 3rd, Melissa and Jake met with a specialist in Boston. An x-ray of Jake’s femur showed a suspicious area by his knee and they were told it looked like a healing fracture, so an MRI was ordered. The following Monday, the most dreaded news that any parent can receive was delivered to the family. The doctors said that Jake had a 6.5cm tumor in his knee, and they were worried that this type of tumor could be malignant.
They would need to confirm the diagnosis with a biopsy, and a battery of other tests to see if it had spread. By the end of the week all the tests had been performed and the results confirmed that in his lower right femur, Jake had a cancer called Osteosarcoma. This is a very aggressive form of bone cancer that mainly affects teen aged boys.
Osteosarcoma likes to grow in large bones and metastasize to the lungs. It is a rare cancer and only affects about 400 people a year in the US.
After meeting with a team of oncology and surgical specialists at Dana Farber and Boston Children’s Hospital the family is now gearing up for the fight of a lifetime.
Jake will go through 10 weeks of chemotherapy right through July. Once that is over, he will have surgery to have the cancerous section, along with a portion of his leg bone removed in August. He will need to have his knee reconstructed.
Following the surgery there will be 5 more months of chemotherapy along with rehabilitation. This will involve many visits to Dana Farber and Children’s Hospital, and a lot of tests to closely monitor the spread of this dangerous cancer.
As you can imagine, the expenses for this treatment can add up very quickly. A lifetime of savings can be depleted in a matter of months with each round of chemo, the various tests, the hospital stays for possible transfusions and fevers, and rehabilitation.
Please consider helping our “Silver Strong” Team Jake by donating to our GoFundMe site.
Jake, like so many other kids out there, needs the support of community and friends to battle this cancer.
Together we can make a difference for Jake, his sister Halle, his parents Rob Silver, and Melissa and Tony Duca.
Any donation amount can make a huge difference. Thank You!
Organizer and beneficiary
Leslie Ziemer Marci
Organizer
Ashland, MA
Melissa Rothschild Duca
Beneficiary