After top doctors in New Jersey and New York told Bill Corbett, 65, diagnosed with stage 4 esophageal cancer, “Your tumor is inoperable,” he tried to process how quickly his life had changed.
“I went from doing my thing, putting in long hours in my carpentry/handyman business, even going to the gym three to four days a week, to realizing that I may have six months to live,” he says. Then surgeon Jeffrey Brodsky, MD, with LVPG Surgical Oncology and Lehigh Valley Topper Cancer Institute told him something different: “I don’t buy it. Let’s operate.”
Brodsky specializes in complex surgeries of the gastrointestinal tract and associated organs. He believed a successful surgery was possible even though cancer had spread to the adrenal gland on Corbett’s left kidney. In Corbett’s favor, disease was primarily confined to two areas, and he was otherwise healthy.