Aretha Franklin's estate has backed a fund to research rare form of pancreatic cancer
“The Aretha Franklin Family is honored to partner with the NETRF to help raise funding for education and research of this devastating disease that takes our loved ones much too soon,” Sabrina Owens, Aretha Franklin’s niece and representative of the family, said in a statement.
“We encourage her friends, fans, and supporters to consider contributing to this cause, until such time as we can eradicate NETs. We believe this is possible.” “A lot of the work we fund is basic science in the laboratory, learning why these tumors grow and spread,” Elyse Gellerman, chief executive officer of NETRF, told the“We don’t know all the answers about that. Researchers are trying to understand these tumors at a cellular level and – with some of the treatments available – why some patients respond and others do not.”
Gellerman added that the fund would help raise awareness about the rare disease, “I know the neuroendocrine tumors community was frustrated when the cause of Aretha Franklin’s death wasn’t correctly reported.” Franklin was reportedly first diagnosed with the disease in 2010 and staved off rumors about her health for years. Franklin’s oncologist Dr. Philip A. Philip told the, “The time that people have with this disease is measured in years, not in fractions of years or months, as it is with most patients pancreatic adenocarcinoma.”
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