Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

With little info in the public domain, Rob Ford's illness and prognosis unclear

Darpan News Desk , 11 Sep, 2014 10:50 AM

    The information provided by the hospital caring for Toronto Mayor Rob Ford on Wednesday evening was very vague — likely deliberately so.

    A CT scan had revealed the mayor had a tumour in his abdomen. It was discovered after he complained of unbearable pain in the lower left quadrant of his torso, said Dr. Rueben Devlin, CEO of Humber River Hospital.

    Devlin said additional testing is needed to determine what kind of tumour the mayor has. He said the hospital hopes to have the results within a few days.

    With so little information, it isn't possible to project with any certainty what the tumour is, whether it is benign or cancerous, or what Ford's prognosis is. The abdomen is home to multiple organs — the stomach, the liver, the pancreas as well as the small intestine and the colon. And abdominal pain is a symptom of several of these forms of the disease.

    However, a gastroenterologist from Australia's leading cancer centre said that based on the information that has been made public, the "commonest thing to be thinking about" would be colorectal cancer.

    "There are a lot of differential diagnoses that could be made from that," Dr. Alex Boussioutas, of the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, said of the information that has been made public.

    "But the commonest thing to be thinking about and the one that we would want to exclude would be colon cancer, obviously.... So if I had to hazard a guess as a clinician that's what I would be thinking was happening."

    Boussioutas said if Ford's doctors suspect he has colon cancer, they will likely use X-ray imaging to try to identify whether the cancer is on the outside of the bowel or the inside. A colonoscopy — a procedure involving the snaking of a scope up into the colon from the rectum — would follow to try to get a piece of tumour tissue to analyze.

    The biopsied tissue would reveal whether the tumour is cancerous, and if it is, the type and stage of the disease. As well, Devlin said Ford's doctors will be looking to see if the tumour had spread.

    Ford previously had abdominal surgery to remove a tumour on his appendix. That procedure was done in 2009.

    “I had a major surgery on my appendix; they took out a piece of my colon. So I had a tumour in my appendix, and that’s pretty scary when that happens,” he told CTV in a September 2010 interview. 

    Boussioutas said the events could be linked, and would raise questions about whether Ford has a genetic predisposition for cancer.

    Ford's father, Doug Ford Sr. died of colon cancer in 2006.

    Given Ford's age, it would be rare to have had one colorectal cancer, let alone two, Boussioutas said.

    "At 45, that's unusual. The peak age for onset of colorectal cancer is in the 60s, so 65 or thereabouts. And so anyone under the age of 50 we'd be certainly looking at a potential genetic association," he said. "Because it has implications for the rest of his family, potentially."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Halifax: Blind Sailors Playing Key Role On Crews Competing At Disabled Sailing Championships

    Halifax: Blind Sailors Playing Key Role On Crews Competing At Disabled Sailing Championships
    HALIFAX - Jim Kerr says he hadn't imagined that sailing would be the way he renewed his career in international athletics after losing his eyesight.

    Halifax: Blind Sailors Playing Key Role On Crews Competing At Disabled Sailing Championships

    Feds Stressed Fatigue, Workload Concerns Just Before Lac-Megantic Disaster

    Feds Stressed Fatigue, Workload Concerns Just Before Lac-Megantic Disaster
    OTTAWA - A train operator's level of fatigue, sleep patterns and "ability to make effective, safe decisions" were among the risk factors singled out in Transport Canada guidelines for single-person train operations — advice that was finalized just months before the Lac-Megantic rail disaster.

    Feds Stressed Fatigue, Workload Concerns Just Before Lac-Megantic Disaster

    Canadian Military Drone Plan Grounded Amid Continuing Debate Over Fleet Needs

    Canadian Military Drone Plan Grounded Amid Continuing Debate Over Fleet Needs
    OTTAWA - The Canadian military's almost decade-long quest to buy unmanned aerial vehicles has been partly hung up by an internal debate about whether the air forces needs one — or two — different fleets of drones.

    Canadian Military Drone Plan Grounded Amid Continuing Debate Over Fleet Needs

    Liberals, NDP Plot To Storm Tories' Fortress Alberta In Next Federal Election

    Liberals, NDP Plot To Storm Tories' Fortress Alberta In Next Federal Election
    OTTAWA - Invading hordes of Liberal and New Democrat MPs will be doing some reconnaissance in Alberta over the next few weeks as their parties prepare plans to storm the Conservative bastion in the next federal election.

    Liberals, NDP Plot To Storm Tories' Fortress Alberta In Next Federal Election

    Questions remain about polygamy law as charges laid against men from B.C. sect

    Questions remain about polygamy law as charges laid against men from B.C. sect
    VANCOUVER - Legal experts say a criminal case involving a polygamous sect in B-C will probably reignite a debate over whether the ban on multiple marriages violates the right to religious freedom.

    Questions remain about polygamy law as charges laid against men from B.C. sect

    Feds Worried About Another 'Idle No More' After New Brunswick Fracking Protest

    Feds Worried About Another 'Idle No More' After New Brunswick Fracking Protest
    MONTREAL - Federal officials closely tracked the fallout of an RCMP raid on a First Nations protest against shale-gas exploration in New Brunswick, at one point raising concerns it could spawn another countrywide movement like Idle No More.

    Feds Worried About Another 'Idle No More' After New Brunswick Fracking Protest