Eight-Year-Old Girl Battles Ovarian Cancer - East Idaho News
Health

Eight-Year-Old Girl Battles Ovarian Cancer

  Published at

abc natalie cosman jef 120914 wg?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1347892178654Melinda Cosman(NEW YORK) — In June 2011, Melinda Cosman, of Manchester, Conn. found out her 7-year-old daughter Natalie was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. 

Throughout the previous year, Natalie complained of stomach pains, sometimes so excruciating, she would have to miss school. Her doctors chalked it up to constipation, maybe a stomach bug. But when the pain became unbearable, Cosman took Natalie to the emergency room.

“[The doctors] were shooting for appendicitis and they brought her in for an ultrasound in the morning to confirm that,” said Cosman.

Instead of a ruptured appendix, the ultrasound detected a 7-centimeter cyst on Natalie’s ovary.

Nearly 22,000 women are diagnosed with ovarian cancer each year, according to the National Cancer Institute. Experts estimate that 500 to 1,000 cases occur in females under age 20.

While cysts are common among women of childbearing age, they are considered rare in young girls who have not undergone puberty.

A biopsy confirmed a cancerous germ cell tumor in Natalie.

“I kept thinking, ‘ovarian cancer in a 7-year-old?'” said Cosman.

It can be difficult for many women to come to terms with an ovarian cancer diagnosis. The process of understanding and accepting the diagnosis is often more difficult for young girls.

For Natalie, undergoing treatment meant missing a year of school and having to sit out on her favorite activity: dance.

“I felt disappointed because I like to dance,” said Natalie. “I like to perform in front of people. I also had a lot of friends at school.”

Two decades ago, treatment for the disease was devastating to young girls. As a precaution, surgeons removed both ovaries, regardless of where the tumor was found. The method eliminated any chance of childbearing.

In recent years, pediatric oncologists have suggested that perhaps a total removal is unnecessary, preserving these young girls’ reproductive health.

While the cause of ovarian cancer in young girls in unclear — studies have not pointed to a genetic or environmental trigger — treatment for the disease is effective, according to Dr. Judith Wolf, division chief of surgery at MD Anderson Cancer in Houston.

“The good news is that even if they’re found when they’re advanced, they respond really well to chemotherapy,” said Wolf, who has treated nearly two dozen cases.

Chemotherapy is over 90 percent effective at treating germ cell tumors, even if it has spread to lymph nodes, according to Wolf.

“The one ovary is removed that’s affected and doesn’t necessarily mean infertility,” said Wolf. In July 2011, Natalie’s surgeons removed her right ovary and right fallopian tube.

“There wasn’t a doubt in my mind [to do the surgery] because when you’re told that your daughter has cancer and that’s what’s going to treat it, you do it,” said Cosman. “I put her in the palm of the doctors.”

Natalie also had her gall bladder removed as part of her treatment. Six rounds of chemotherapy followed, and by January 2012, Natalie completed treatment for the disease.

“I feel a lot better besides all that stuff,” said Natalie.

“To this day she jokes that her right side is lighter than her left,” said Cosman.

While the disease is rare in young girls, Cosman warned parents not to ignore pain symptoms in their children.

Potential signs of the disease in young girls include a lump that can be felt in the abdominal area, severe abdominal or lower back pain, and prolonged bloating or constipation, Wolf said.

The U.S. Preventative Task Force recommends against ovarian cancer screening for women who are not at high risk.

Since it’s unclear what type of young girl would be at risk for the disease, Dr. Cynthia Herzog, professor of pediatrics at MD Anderson Cancer Center said, “It’s too rare to make screening for young girls a reasonable thing.”

But if symptoms persist, Herzog recommended that parents take their children to a pediatrician for evaluation.

“I’m very thankful that with everything that happened that we caught it early it enough,” said Cosman.

This month, Natalie will return to school and get to attend dance practice again.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

SUBMIT A CORRECTION