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EXODUS's TOM HUNTING gives health update: “everything is good”

29-08-2024

In a new interview with Reality Check TVEXODUS‘s Tom Hunting offered an update on his health, more than three years after he underwent a successful total gastrectomy during his battle with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the stomach. The drummer said: “I’m doing good, doing great. With the health and cancer, everything, yes. Everything is good. They take pictures often. They don’t see anything in there. So I just kind of go out there in the world and live my life.”

Back in February 2023, Hunting told Radioactive MikeZ, host of the 96.7 KCAL-FM program “Wired In The Empire”, about how he was first diagnosed with cancer: “The first thing that happened is I was losing weight and I didn’t have hunger for food. It’s hard to explain what that would feel like. In the past, I’ve had those kind of flareups and it was always due to anxiety or something. But this felt different. And it was lingering. I was going to see doctors. And they did a bunch of scans. They didn’t see anything in the scans. All the blood work was good. And then they sent a camera inside there.

“I urge anybody who’s having a gut problem, if the problems persist, they’re gonna do a CT scan first. Tell them you want an endoscopy. That’s the best test out there. It probably saved my ass, looking back.”

Tom continued: “I was taking antacid stuff, like Pepcid and whatever. And I probably took that Zantac drug that they’re talking about causing cancer. I brought that up to my doctors too. Zantac has a lot of the same stuff that your Pepcids and your other ones have in it too. And at the end of the day, you shouldn’t have to take that shit for, like, a year. So, that was there. It was an esophageal type of cancer that showed up in what is called the cardinal region of my stomach; it was forming in there and causing me not to eat. I couldn’t burp. That was another one. I had this tumor inside me, and I couldn’t burp. And as soon as they gave me my first dose of chemo, before the surgery, something loosened up in there and I was able to burp. It felt so good. (Laughs)”

According to Hunting, he “ended up having two different kinds of cancer. They found a tumor inside my stomach,” he said. “So then they do what they call a laparoscopic surgery, which they send two things inside of you. They make two cuts and they send a camera inside of you to physically explore the region and the outside region. And mine was in a weird spot; mine was in my stomach. So, okay, they wanted to check out the outside of the stomach lining — some crazy testing that they’ve gotta do. But it’s all part of the process to make you a candidate for the surgery. When they did the laparoscopic procedure with me, it’s two incisions, it’s a camera that goes in and another tool that moves your organs out of the way for this camera to go do its job. So they found nodules of mesothelioma on my abdomen wall.”

When asked if the doctors said there was anything in particular that caused his cancer, such as eating habits, lifestyle, living or working environments, genetics, or something else, Hunting replied: “I asked the specialist, I was, like, ‘Did I do something to cause this? Did I do a brake job on my car and sniffed asbestos or some shit?’ And he said it could have been anything. That cancer could have been just environmental, and it just happened.

“It’s funny, ’cause had I not had the original cancer, I never would have needed a laparoscopic procedure to begin with, and they never would have found the mesothelioma,” Tom explained. “But for a minute, when they were doing that test, what they thought they were looking at was the same type of cancer that they saw in my stomach. So there was a minute there where I was, like, stage four plus plus plus, like, ‘Give him chemo. Keep him comfortable.’ I wouldn’t have been a candidate to even get any kind of surgery. So they found out it was a different type of cancer that was in my stomach. That makes you a candidate to get the surgery and the treatment after to try to knock out any nodules of mesothelioma that they would find in there.”

Regarding his post-surgery recovery, Hunting said: “They took out 42 lymph nodes and my stomach and all this crazy surgery — like two surgeries in one surgery — and they didn’t find one speck of cancer in one of the lymph nodes, which is, like, ‘Holy shit.’ If you’re going through it, that’s the fucking jackpot. The best three words you can hear are ‘nothing to see’.

“Fortunately, it’s been… After the surgery, I got six months, or five and a half months of immunotherapy, ’cause they found out that the chemo didn’t affect the cancer like they wanted it to, so they did the surgery. It trains your immune system to go out and kill rogue cells that it finds. It’s pretty high-tech shit. And I’m a beneficiary of that too.”

Tom added: “Science is great. And I had a lot of good people to talk to along the way to help me out. And that’s kind of where I’m at now. I wanna be that ear for somebody who’s recently getting told that news.

“I’m thankful. And I’m definitely one of the lucky ones. Science is killer, and what they’re able to do for people in my situation and others nowadays is leaps and bounds from what they could do even five years ago.”

GoFundMe campaign to help Hunting with medical expenses had previously raised more than $114,000 — including $5,000 from Tom‘s former EXODUS bandmate, current METALLICA guitarist Kirk Hammett, and $1,500 from FOZZY singer and wrestling superstar Chris Jericho.

EXODUS released its new album, “Persona Non Grata”, in November 2021 via Nuclear Blast Records. The LP was recorded at a studio in Lake Almanor, California and was engineered by Steve Lagudi and EXODUS. It was produced by EXODUS and was mixed by Andy Sneap. For the third time in the band’s history, they returned to Swedish artist Pär Olofsson to create the album artwork.

“Persona Non Grata” is the follow-up to 2014’s “Blood In Blood Out”, which was the San Francisco Bay Area thrashers’ first release since the departure of EXODUS‘s singer of nine years, Rob Dukes, and the return of Souza, who previously fronted EXODUS from 1986 to 1993 and from 2002 to 2004.

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