02/09/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 02/09/2026 08:05
Philip and Linda Simmons have loved each other in sickness and in health-mostly health-for decades. Cancer dealt them a double blow that made recent years difficult, but after treatment at Cedars-Sinai, they are celebrating Valentine's Day cancer-free.
"After 35 years of marriage, my heart still sings when I look at her," Philip said. "My cancer was much worse on Linda than it was on me, and her cancer was worse on me than it was on her. Whichever one of us was sick, the other one filled in the gaps. But that's the way we normally live our lives. Whatever one needs, the other one provides."
Philip's pancreatic cancer was detected in early 2024 during an unrelated MRI of his kidneys. Arsen Osipov, MD, medical director of the Pancreatic Cancer Multidisciplinary Clinic and Multidisciplinary Cancer Programs and Integration at Cedars-Sinai, Philip's oncologist, said it was a stroke of luck.
"He was diagnosed at a curable stage, before the cancer had spread," Osipov said. "Only 10 to 20% of patients with pancreatic cancer are diagnosed this early."
Philip was one of the first patients to visit the multidisciplinary clinic, where in a single day he met with medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, surgeons, gastroenterologists and other experts, and agreed on a treatment plan: four months of chemotherapy, followed by radiation and a complicated surgery called a Whipple procedure.
"This is a complex operation where we remove what's called the head of the pancreas, the first part of the small intestine, the gallbladder and the bile duct," said Nicholas Nissen, MD, director of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery. "After removal, these structures are reattached to restore normal function."
This procedure once required large incisions, but because radiation and chemotherapy successfully shrank Philip's tumor, Nissen was able to perform the procedure robotically.
"This allows us to make smaller incisions, with lower risk of complications and a shorter recovery time for the patient," Nissen said.
After four days in the hospital and two more months of chemotherapy, Philip was declared cancer-free in June.
But the couple had just a few days to celebrate.
Less than a week after Philip learned he was cancer-free, Linda was diagnosed with breast cancer after undergoing a routine mammogram.
"As a health system, we focus on screening and are always developing new ways to detect cancer early," said Robert Figlin, MD,interim director of Cedars-Sinai Cancer. "For both of these patients, early detection was key to the best possible outcome."
Still, the diagnosis was a bit of a shock to Philip and Linda.
"It was sort of unbelievable," Linda said. "But we had been through the whole process with Phil, and his surgery was much more serious than mine, and he did so well that I felt much more comfortable."
And she, too, was lucky, said Armando Giuliano, MD, director of Breast Surgical Oncology at Cedars-Sinai Cancer and Linda's surgeon.
"She had a screen-detected cancer that has no symptoms. You can't feel it. It causes no pain, no discharge," Giuliano said. "The only way you can detect a cancer like that is with breast cancer screening. And those cancers are the smallest cancers-the cancers that are the easiest to cure."
Giuliano was able to perform a breast-sparing therapy known as a partial mastectomy or lumpectomy.
"We remove the area of the breast that has cancer, all the way around so that we have clean margins," Giuliano said. "And then we do an internal reconstruction to make the breast look as natural as possible."
Giuliano also performed a procedure he pioneered, which he continues to develop at Cedars-Sinai, called a sentinel lymph node biopsy, removing one or two lymph nodes to be certain the cancer had not spread beyond the breast.
"He did such a beautiful job that if you were to look at my breast, you would not know I had had surgery," Linda said.
Linda's cancer was an infiltrating ductal carcinoma, a cancer that starts in the breast ducts and can spread throughout the body. It was also HER2 positive, so it required further treatment.
"Around 20% of cancers have this overexpression of the HER2 protein, which makes them more aggressive and at higher risk of spreading," said medical oncologist Philomena McAndrew, MD. "For this reason, after Linda's surgery we treated her with chemotherapy and immunotherapy. We followed that with radiation therapy, and Lindadid incredibly well throughout each of these steps."
One important element for Linda was McAndrew's recommendation to use a cooling cap to help avoid hair loss during chemotherapy.
"I'm so thrilled that I did," Linda said. "Dr. McAndrew told me that when women lose their hair, it's very traumatic. When they look in the mirror, they realize how sick they are. Fortunately, that didn't happen to me, and I was so grateful."
Linda completed her final radiation treatment in January and will continue preventive therapy for five years. She and Philip will also have regular follow-up screenings.
But for now they are headed from their "city house" in Culver City to their main house in Lake Arrowhead, to spend time with friends they haven't seen in a while.
Then they'll continue their journey, in sickness and in health, together.
"We're going on a cruise to Hawaii at the end of February," Linda said. "We're just trying to pack some fun into the next 20 years."
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