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Cellular Congenital Mesoblastic Nephroma: Chase's Story

Meet Chase

 

Chase Jackman wearing a face mask inside of a Children's Mercy patient room.
Chase Jackman wearing a face mask.

“Hey mom!  You know what 3 + 5 is?” asks inquisitive 6-year-old Chase Jackman.

“No Chase. What is it?” responds his mom, La Daya Gordon.

“It’s 8!” Chase answers.

“Chase loves to count!” La Daya says, smiling. “And he loves to play games. Connect 4. Jenga. PlayStation. He’s a goofy, fun-loving kid who gives me like 1,000 hugs a day.”

But at just 7 months old, La Daya wasn’t sure her baby would live long enough to give her those hugs, or learn to count, or play any games. He was gravely ill, but no one knew it until La Daya noticed his belly looked like it was growing larger and larger.

“I didn’t know what was going on, so I took Chase to the Emergency Department at the Children’s Mercy Adele Hall Campus. He had been constipated, so I thought that might have something to do with it,” she said.

Doctors weren’t sure what was going on either.

“Initially, Chase was seen in the emergency room and was found to have signs of respiratory distress and lymphangioma, a benign lymphatic growth,” explained Lindsey Fricke, RN, MSN, FNP-BC, Nurse Practitioner.

Several days later, La Daya brought Chase back to the emergency room. His belly was even larger, and he was sicker.

“Chase wasn’t a very big baby, but he looked like he had a basketball in his belly,” La Daya said.

Additional imaging confirmed findings consistent with lymphangioma, and Chase was admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) to begin treatment with sclerotherapy and medications.

While there, Chase developed a serious condition called abdominal compartment syndrome, and doctors operated, opening his abdomen to release the pressure building up inside, and leaving his abdomen open to heal.

“That day, doctors gave Chase 72 hours to live,” La Daya said. “We probably had 100 family members come to the hospital to support Chase through surgery. We took over the entire waiting room.”

Though Chase survived the surgery, he was intubated and in the PICU on a ventilator. In the coming days, doctors continued therapy to shrink the softball-sized tumor they’d found, but they still weren’t sure of the source of the problem.

Troubling diagnosis


Three weeks later when Shawn St. Peter, MD, pediatric surgeon and Children’s Mercy Surgeon-in-Chief, was closing Chase’s abdomen, he noticed some suspicious tissue that he collected and sent to the lab.

Chase Jackman sitting on his mother's lap while giving blood at Children's Mercy. They are both wearing face masks.
Chase giving blood while his mom looks on.

The lab diagnosed the tissue as a cancerous tumor, and Chase started chemotherapy treatment. But the origin of the cancer remained a mystery.

About one month into treatment, an MRI showed the mass was getting smaller, and it looked like it had originated in the kidney.

“Because his pathology wasn’t definitive, the tumor was sent for additional analysis,” Lindsey explained. Results determined Chase’s cancer was an aggressive tumor called cellular congenital mesoblastic nephroma, which accounts for about 5% of pediatric kidney cancers. More than 90% of cases are diagnosed within the first year of life.

“Our oncologist said Chase was probably born with the cancer, but it often goes undetected because it’s so rare,” La Daya said.

Aggressive tumor = aggressive treatment


By now, Chase was nearly 1 ½ years old, and had spent months on the hospital’s pediatric oncology unit receiving additional cycles of chemotherapy. He also had his left kidney removed during his stay. After completing treatment, the cancer seemed to be gone.

But just a few weeks after returning home, Chase’s stomach looked like it was getting bigger again. La Daya feared the worst, and she was right, the cancer was back. It was bigger than before—about the size of a football—and it now involved his abdominal cavity and spleen.

After surgery to remove the tumor and his spleen, Chase’s oncologist added several weeks of radiation therapy to his treatment regimen, along with the original chemotherapy medications. Fortunately, Chase responded well to the combination therapy, but no one was quite sure what to expect next.

While Chase was sick, La Daya said she considered Children’s Mercy their home. “If Chase was in the hospital, I was in the hospital,” La Daya said. “I didn’t want to leave his side.”

Chase even celebrated his first birthday in Children’s Mercy. “We had a huge party for him with the doctors, nurses, family and friends,” La Daya said.

Lindsey remembers the party well. “Honestly, we weren’t sure there would be a second birthday. He was a very sick little boy.”

Chase Jackman and Dr. Joel Thompson with their arm around each other and heads touching while looking at the camera. They are wearing face masks and inside a Children's Mercy patient room.
Chase with Dr. Joel Thompson.

But Chase defied the odds. Today, he’s been cancer-free for four years. To be certain he stays healthy, he sees Lindsey and Joel Thompson, MD, pediatric oncologist, in the hospital’s Outpatient Cancer Clinic, plus an endocrinologist and a nephrologist.

At his last appointment, he graduated to annual check-ups, and now he is transitioning to the Survive & Thrive Clinic—and that’s just what this young cancer survivor is doing!

Follow me!


During the months and months Chase spent in Children’s Mercy, he earned the nickname Chase the Champ, winning the hearts of his doctors, nurses and social media followers.

Chase Jackman and Dr. Joel Thompson giving each other a high-five inside a Children's Mercy patient room.
Chase and Dr. Joel Thompson high-fiving!

“When Chase was in the hospital, he would sit at the nurses’ station. Everyone just loved him. He was so resilient. He never complained,” Lindsey said. “Even now, he doesn’t complain, and his smile is just infectious.”

While hospitalized, Chase became a bit of a celebrity himself when he got to meet several of the stars involved in the Big Slick Celebrity Weekend, an event that’s raised millions of dollars to support the Children’s Mercy Cancer Center.

When he was 3 years old, the Make-a-Wish Foundation granted Chase and his family his wish to visit Disneyland. “We’ve kept that tradition up, traveling about the same time each year to a new location,” La Daya said.

And, Chase has become a regular at the annual Walk4Life event, which also supports cancer patients. “Our family and friends all wear their Chase the Champ shirts and walk every year,” La Daya said.

Yep! Chase is a popular guy. He’s had more than 1,000 shares on Facebook!

Lessons learned

 

La Daya Gordon with her son, Chase Jackman at Children's Mercy and wearing face masks.
Chase with his mom, La Daya.

Throughout Chase’s journey, La Daya said she’s come to appreciate how fortunate they are that Chase is now a healthy first-grader.

“At one point, doctors told me he might not live 72 hours, and lots of people have reached out to me whose children haven’t survived. It’s a relief to see how strong Chase is. I’ve learned about strength and faith along the way.

“And Chase thanks God he has no more cancer,” La Daya said. “He has scars on his belly, but to look at him, you would never know all he’s been through.

Chase Jackman with nurse, Lindsey Fricke. They have their arms around each other and are wearing face masks inside a Children's Mercy patient room.n's Mercy patient room.
Chase with nurse, Lindsey Fricke.

“The doctors and nurses at Children’s Mercy were wonderful. We loved everyone here, and still keep in touch with some of the nurses from 4 Henson on social media,” she said.

La Daya, Chase and Chase’s father, John Jackman, also would like to thank the Hem/Onc team and Lindsey. “We will never forget any of you.”

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