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Larry Reece misdiagnosed with stage four lung cancer
Larry Reece misdiagnosed with stage four lung cancer

Larry Reece misdiagnosed with stage four lung cancer

A Hamilton father is demanding answers from two hospitals after he was wrongly diagnosed with terminal cancer and recommended for chemotherapy.

Larry Reece, 46, wants to know why the hospitals initially continued to stand by the misdiagnosis even after he underwent additional tests in the United States that he says conclusively proved he did not have cancer.

Larry Reece: “Started out with a bad cough then some x-rays and in January 2014, they told me it was a sarcoid.”

Sarcoidosis is an autoimmune disease that’s treatable with steroids. But further tests revealed a deadlier diagnosis.

Reece: “After a biopsy, the doctor sat me down and said that I had cancer.”

Stage four lung cancer — most people die within a year.

Reece “Jaw-dropping, not believable, questioning it, ‘Are you Sure?’ I don’t feel like I’m sick or nothing, like you’re supposed to when you read about it, I didn’t feel sick”

Larry decided to get another opinion, south of the border: “After going down to the U.S. for another biopsy and further analysis as well, and everything was coming back negative.”

Reece’s results were sent back to Hamilton where a second biopsy in September resulted in no signs of cancer but of the original diagnosis of sarcoids.

Reece: “Happy of course, mad at the same time, angry. How could this happen to me, what went wrong?”

After launching an investigation into the matter, the initial reports says there was a problem with Larry’s sample.

Dr. Hugh Fuller, St. Joseph’s Healthcare: “There was an error in the specimen management and a contamination of his slide. Contaminated with material from another patient. I can assure you that the other patient was correctly diagnosed and was treated accordingly.”

Dr. Richard McLean, Hamilton Health Sciences: The instance of error is really, really low. To pick a number, I’d say it’s a range from one in five hundred to one in a million, one in 500-thousand to one in a million.”

While some people might seek legal action after being misdiagnosed with a serious illness like stage four lung cancer, instead Mr. Reece wants to help people who were in a similar situation as him.

Agencies/Canadajournal




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    One comment

    1. Hey! How many people can say the hospital screwed up and they lived as a result?!

      Congratulations on the great news that you don’t have cancer, man!

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