Graduate Student, Cancer Survivor Committed to Research and Advocacy
Chris Farrell ’16, ’23 MPA was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma in 2020, and he is now in remission. He has made it his mission to serve as a source of support for others who are going through treatment and to help find a cure for the disease.
August 31, 2022
By Renee Chmiel, Office of Marketing and Communications
In 2020, Chris Farrell ’16, ’23 MPA noticed his neck was swollen, and he saw a swollen lymph node above his collarbone. He’d also been experiencing fatigue, and he’d lost weight, so he went to the doctor. His diagnosis of stage 4 Hodgkin's lymphoma changed his life.
A type of cancer, Hodgkin's lymphoma affects the lymphatic system. Despite completing six months of chemotherapy followed by a month of radiation, a scan in January 2021 indicated Farrell’s cancer had returned. He then completed another two months of intense chemotherapy, then underwent a stem-cell transplant the following May.
After spending a month in the hospital, Farrell began a maintenance immunotherapy treatment, which finished this past June. He is now in remission.
“My mission is to now play a small part in the effort to end blood cancers, and, really, any cancers,” he said. “I also want to be a support system for others who are going through treatment. I know I had a lot of questions and fears when I was first diagnosed. I would like other patients to know that they can come to me.”
‘We all know someone who has been affected by cancer’
Farrell is organizing a team to walk and raise money for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society's upcoming Light the Night event in Norwalk, Conn. The event, which will be held at Calf Pasture Beach on October 8, raises money for research, advocacy, and support for patients and their families. Farrell hopes to raise $5,000 for the organization.
“I chose this organization because they saved my life,” he said. “The money they raise goes to research new drugs and therapies to cure blood cancers. Without it, the chemotherapy drugs and stem-cell transplant I received over the past two years probably would not exist. They equip oncologists and scientists with the tools they need to succeed.”
“We all know someone who has been affected by cancer,” he said. “If we all sacrificed a small amount of time or money to beating this disease, it would not stand a chance.”