dan fine doesn’t walk as far as he used to. not since pancreatic cancer spread to his liver, lungs and lymph nodes.
these days, a short walk leaves him breathless. but on nov. 8, he’ll be at the starting line of stanley park’s kicking pancreas 5k — not to run it, but to cheer the entire way as its race director.
for the 66-year-old west vancouver resident, this isn’t just a run. it’s a mission. a legacy.
“i have chosen to dedicate much of my remaining time on earth to raising awareness and supporting those still in the fight,” fine told postmedia news.
there are no regular screenings for pancreatic cancer in canada, and symptoms, like back or leg pain, typically don’t appear until the disease is already advanced. in b.c., around 800 people are diagnosed each year.
west vancouver’s dan fine, 66, and his wife kim.
sarah fine
fine’s diagnosis came nearly a year ago while he and his wife of 38 years, kim, were vacationing in france.
“i had started working out consistently at the gym, and was thinking i had lost 20 pounds and was really sore in my arms, back and legs because of all the workouts,” he said. “but as soon as i visited a doctor and was sent for tests, they knew right away that it was cancer.”
since then, he has endured more than 2,000 hours of chemotherapy through b.c. cancer and enrolled in a two-month clinical trial in texas. at first, the treatments worked but now they’ve stopped.