2024 POGO Symposium Speakers Share Insights from their Sessions

The 2024 POGO Multidisciplinary Symposium on Childhood Cancer headed to Niagara-on-the-Lake, where Ontario’s pediatric oncology community, which included representatives from POGO partner hospitals, gathered to learn, collaborate and connect. 

Over 15 healthcare professionals across various disciplines presented on a range of topics. Here are some session recaps.

Ceilidh Eaton Russell from McMaster University spoke about “good parenting” when a child is seriously ill, sharing insights from oncology parents to offer practical strategies to support families affected by childhood cancer.

https://youtu.be/2bFdxPoJspg

Dr. Nicole Culos-Reed from the University of Calgary focused on the important role of nutrition and exercise throughout a child’s cancer treatment.

https://youtu.be/eFeSUHrMHLM

Dr. Theodore Laetsch from Children's Hospital of Philadelphia addressed recent successes in developing new treatments for pediatric solid tumours and their profound impact on patient care.

https://youtu.be/DH-wDfZr4d8

Chantal St. Jules from The Hospital for Sick Children discussed the unique experiences of autistic children and youth with cancer, providing strategies to incorporate trauma-based and developmental supports into their care.

https://youtu.be/TTCbV0XmNvI

Dr. David Teachey from Children's Hospital of Philadelphia highlighted new therapies and immunotherapies to improve outcomes for children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

https://youtu.be/2ucjfVNavp4

Dr. Jennifer Seelisch from London Health Sciences Centre (LHSC) delved into the exploration and utilization of immuno-oncology therapy to treat Hodgkin Lymphoma and the potential to reduce the use of standard chemotherapy and radiation and their late effects.

https://youtu.be/YDe9I8aPmmQ

Dr. Joerg Krueger from The Hospital for Sick Children talked about the challenges of access to cellular therapies and the initiatives to ensure that children in Canada have access to them in the future.

https://youtu.be/ajBn2VXN5KM


Bruce Power and supplier partners donate $100,000 to Pediatric Oncology Group of Ontario

Originally published on the Bruce Power website, September 25, 2024

From left to right: Dr. Charmaine van Schaik, POGO Board Vice-chair; Lauren Ettin, POGO CEO; Shannon Caskey, POGO Chief Development Officer & Director of Communications; and James Scongack, POGO Board Chair

Bruce Power and its supplier partners continue to support those impacted by childhood cancer by combining to donate $100,000 to the Pediatric Oncology Group of Ontario (POGO).

Bruce Power and supplier donations enable POGO to continue to build the best childhood cancer research and care systems for impacted youth and their families. POGO programs include financial assistance for families in need, transitions counselling and much needed continued research in the field.

“Through the generous commitment of Bruce Power and its Supplier Partners, we are making a meaningful difference in the childhood cancer community,” said Shannon Caskey, POGO’s Chief Development Officer. “Their investment enables us to extend our reach, innovate, and drive programs and services that benefit patients, survivors, families, and health care professionals throughout Ontario.”

Pat Dalzell, Bruce Power’s Vice-President of Corporate Affairs and Market Development, said the company and its partners are happy to be able to help.

“We are committed to supporting POGO with its impressive cancer care efforts. With cancer rates rising worldwide and its devastating impact on children and their families, we are proud to support an organization that provides impacted Ontario families with the care and comfort they need,” Dalzell said.

Bruce Power and its employees are also proud of their role as a global supplier of medical isotopes, which are used in various forms of cancer treatment and the sterilization of medical equipment.

About Bruce Power

Bruce Power is an electricity company based in Bruce County, Saugeen Ojibway Nation Territory, Ontario. We are powered by our people. Our 4,200 employees are the foundation of our accomplishments and are proud of the role they play in safely delivering clean, reliable nuclear power to families and businesses across the province and cancer-fighting medical isotopes around the world.


Congratulations to the 2024 POGO Recognition Awards Recipients 

On Friday, November 8, the Pediatric Oncology Group of Ontario (POGO) honoured the recipients of the 2024 POGO Recognition Awards at a Celebratory Dinner. Established in 1999, the awards acknowledge significant contributions of Ontarians to the field of childhood cancer care in Ontario and beyond. Award recipients work in POGO partner hospitals and demonstrate POGO’s core values of partnership, collaboration and excellence.

Congratulations to the 2024 POGO Recognition Awards recipients: Slaight Family Foundation, Community Partner Impact Award (represented by POGO CEO Lauren Ettin, fourth from left); Ian Wilson, MD, POGO Visionary Award; Tina Hamalainen, RN, BScN, Nursing Leadership Award; Lee Dupuis, RPh, PhD. They are joined (l to r) by Shannon Caskey, POGO Chief Development Officer and Director of Communications; Dr. David Hodgson, POGO Medical Director; Dr. Charmaine van Schaik, POGO Board Vice-chair; and James Scongack, POGO Board Chair (far right).

POGO Champion Award 

Lee Dupuis, RPh, PhD
Pediatric Oncologist, Senior Scientist, Professor, Division of Haematology/Oncology, The Hospital for Sick Children
In recognition of her dedication to improving the lives of childhood cancer patients, exceptional leadership in supportive care, and commitment to those she mentors and all with whom she collaborates, in Ontario and beyond.   


POGO Visionary Award  

Ian M. Wilson, MD 
Pediatrician, Grand River Hospital
In recognition of his integral role in shaping the vision for the POGO Satellite Clinic Program, bringing childhood cancer care closer to home for families in communities across Ontario. 


POGO Nursing Leadership Award  

Tina Hamalainen, RN, BScN
POGO Interlink Team Leader, The Hospital for Sick Children
In recognition of her commitment to a patient-centred approach to childhood cancer care that improves the lives of young people and their families, and to a culture of learning in support of pediatric oncology teams. 


POGO Community Partner Impact  

The Slaight Family Foundation
In recognition of their exceptional and longstanding commitment to childhood cancer care, and landmark investment of $1,000,000 in the POGO School and Work Transitions Program.  

Learn more about the POGO Recognition Awards Program


Let's Raise Awareness of Childhood Cancer all Month Long

Meet the Funk family. When young Christopher was just a year old he was diagnosed with a spinal cord tumour. After an intense surgery and several months of chemotherapy, the family was relieved to move his treatment to a POGO Satellite Clinic closer to home, where he still receives weekly chemotherapy. This transition not only reduced the time his parents had to spend away from work but also allowed Christopher and his sibling, Alexander, to spend much more time together. 

September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month (CCAM). In Ontario and beyond, many are raising awareness of both the progress and ongoing challenges in childhood cancer care. Every day, POGO collaborates with hospitals, families, survivors, government, and donors to champion this cause. 

Here’s how you can get involved: 

GIVE 

Support childhood cancer care by making a donation, becoming a monthly donor, learning more about legacy giving, or contributing in honour of someone affected by childhood cancer.

#LINKEDForLife Campaign 

Vibrant paper chains will hang in the halls of POGO partner hospitals throughout Ontario, showcasing our collective commitment to support young cancer patients and their families, survivors, healthcare teams, and those who left us too soon. Donate to add your name and help grow our chain!

Get Your Company Involved 

Engage your company with fun activities like office fundraisers, a pajama day, raffles, or building a #LINKEDForLife chain.  

Register for an Event that Supports POGO 

Stay active and support childhood cancer care by participating in the PUMA Toronto Women’s 8K/5K on Saturday, October 5, 2024 or the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon 5K on Saturday, October 19, 2024. Register and fundraise for POGO.  

Let’s work together to make a difference!


Join us in Raising Money for Kids with Cancer!

Do you want to give back to an organization that is important to you but don’t know where to begin?

Individual, community, school and corporate events in support of POGO make a big impact in the lives of children and youth with cancer, survivors and their families.

Celebrate a milestone, host a sporting event, fundraise at your school, plan a social event, create a team challenge at your office or add a fundraising component to an existing event — there are so many options!  

The funds you raise provide financial assistance to families so they can pay for out-of-pocket costs associated with their child’s treatment, support survivors with customized school and ​work counselling when their disease or its treatment has left them with learning challenges and fund promising research that examines the impact of childhood cancer and its treatment. 

Get started today with our easy-to-use fundraising platform. Reach out to events@pogo.ca with any questions or for help getting started!


Using AI for Brain Tumour Treatment 

Radiation therapy (RT) is a common treatment for brain tumours (the second most common cancer in childhood after leukemia). The goal is to deliver a focused dose of radiation to the tumour and surrounding at-risk regions while minimizing radiation to normal brain tissues. This is particularly crucial for young patients in whom excess RT to normal brain tissues can lead to significant long-term side effects.

The standard method of manual radiation therapy planning is time-consuming and can vary in quality depending on the experience of the radiation therapist and oncology staff. Artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted planning has been shown to improve the speed and quality of RT plan design and reduce unnecessary doses to normal brain tissues.

In a project involving the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre in Toronto, as well as the London Regional Cancer Program (Ontario), researchers evaluated the potential benefit of collaborative AI-RT planning for children, youth and young adults with brain tumours. The group intends to disseminate the cutting-edge AI technology and create new collaborations to improve RT for thousands of cancer patients across Canada.

For this study, 61 patients were enrolled, with approximately two RT plans created by expert RT planners (standard practice) and one AI-assisted plan created for each patient. In a blind evaluation by the treating oncologists, the AI-assisted plans were deemed to be as good or better than the manual plans. AI-assisted plans delivered a slightly smaller dose of radiation to normal brain tissues and were designed in less time.

The conclusion: AI-assisted radiation therapy planning creates high-quality radiotherapy plans for children and young adults with brain tumours. This is the first study of AI-assisted RT planning to include children, and creates an opportunity to rapidly create high quality plans for patients needing urgent treatment, and facilitate planning for smaller centres.

Read the full published article: A Prospective Study of Machine Learning − Assisted Radiation Therapy Planning for Patients Receiving 54 Gy to the Brain

Derek S. Tsang, MD, MSc; Grace Tsui, BSc, MRT(T); Anna T. Santiago, MSc, MPH; Harald Keller, PhD; Thomas Purdie, PhD, FAAPM; Chris Mcintosh, PhD; Glenn Bauman, MD; Nancy La Macchia, MRT(T); Amy Parent, BSc, MRT(T); Hitesh Dama, BSc, MRT(T); Sameera Ahmed, MSc; Normand Laperriere, MD; Barbara-Ann Millar, MBChB; Valerie Liu, BSc; David C. Hodgson, MD, MPH, FASTRO


Let's Raise Awareness of Childhood Cancer all Month Long

Meet the Funk family. When young Christopher was just a year old he was diagnosed with a spinal cord tumour. After an intense surgery and several months of chemotherapy, the family was relieved to move his treatment to a POGO Satellite Clinic closer to home, where he still receives weekly chemotherapy. This transition not only reduced the time his parents had to spend away from work but also allowed Christopher and his sibling, Alexander, to spend much more time together. 

September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month (CCAM). In Ontario and beyond, many are raising awareness of both the progress and ongoing challenges in childhood cancer care. Every day, POGO collaborates with hospitals, families, survivors, government, and donors to champion this cause. 

Here’s how you can get involved: 

GIVE 

Support childhood cancer care by making a donation, becoming a monthly donor, learning more about legacy giving, or contributing in honour of someone affected by childhood cancer.

#LINKEDForLife Campaign 

Vibrant paper chains will hang in the halls of POGO partner hospitals throughout Ontario, showcasing our collective commitment to support young cancer patients and their families, survivors, healthcare teams, and those who left us too soon. Donate to add your name and help grow our chain!

Get Your Company Involved 

Engage your company with fun activities like office fundraisers, a pajama day, raffles, or building a #LINKEDForLife chain.  

Register for an Event that Supports POGO 

Stay active and support childhood cancer care by participating in the PUMA Toronto Women’s 8K/5K on Saturday, October 5, 2024 or the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon 5K on Saturday, October 19, 2024. Register and fundraise for POGO.  

Let’s work together to make a difference!


A Reservoir of Strength: Navigating My Child’s Cancer Journey 

A question I’m often asked is, “How did it all start?”

It starts with our daughter Ellie—our healthy 10-year-old daughter who played on every sports team. To us, she was the picture of vitality.

One day we noticed what we thought was an innocent bump on her left cheek. Our general practitioner (GP) wasn’t concerned, thinking it was just a benign tumour made of fat tissue. We didn’t think too much of it until it started to grow. Ellie didn’t like how it was changing her face, so we made an appointment with a plastic surgeon to have it removed. Like our GP, he also assumed it was a little benign cyst and that it was nothing to worry about. 

Two weeks later, we visited our plastic surgeon for Ellie’s routine post-op meeting. I observed the nurse’s energy and knew that something was wrong. It was the way his eyes darted between me and his computer screen that made the air in the room shift. At that exact moment, I felt my world fracture.

The plastic surgeon took me into the hall and told me Ellie’s biopsy was abnormal and needed to be sent away for more tests. Ten days later, we received the devastating news—our little girl had a type of cancer called rhabdomyosarcoma. 

Struggling to make sense of our new reality, we met Arvinder, our POGO Interlink Nurse. When she called to book her first home visit with Ellie, I remember confessing to her that I was terrified and didn’t know how to get through this. She quickly replied, “Don’t worry; you’ve got me now, and I’m going to get you through this.”

Arvinder kept her promise. She’s made multiple home visits; connected us to every single resource we can access; met with Ellie’s teachers and explained to them how her treatment has affected her learning, academics and more, and, above all, she held our hands every step of the way. 

About two months into Ellie’s treatment, we were at the hospital for a long day of chemo. Our oncologist asked me to step out and meet her in a small room down the hall from where my husband was sitting bedside with Ellie.

She calmly told me that Ellie’s biopsy indicated she may have a genetic mutation that would make her chemo-resistant. If Ellie was positive for this gene, it meant her treatment plan and chances of survival would change drastically. This also meant that our son, Oakley, might carry the same gene, making him vulnerable to a cancer diagnosis as well. Once again, the air in the room changed, and I was thrown even deeper into a place of fear and uncertainty.

Returning to the room where Ellie was receiving chemo, I had to sit across from my husband and text him every word I could remember our oncologist saying. My hands were trembling while I wrote to him, watching his face absorb this news two feet away from me. We were unable to react, hold each other or say anything without Ellie catching on. Instead, we just sat there silently while tears filled our masks. 

Something interesting happens when you’re faced with the traumatizing and terrifying possibility that you could lose your child. It turns out we have this hidden reservoir of strength buried deep inside us. All parents have it, I assure you. And when your child’s health or wellbeing is threatened, the doors to this reservoir get ripped off their hinges and you are flooded with a strength and resilience you didn’t know you had.

During the seven agonizing weeks that we waited for Ellie’s genetic test results, we waited to find out if our daughter would survive this or not. We made her comfort our primary focus, trying to find as many moments of joy and peace as we could. We did everything we could to turn our fear and grief into love and beauty for our daughter. And it worked. When Ellie looks back at her treatment, she mostly remembers it as a cozy, warm and family-centered time. She remembers us all cocooned on the couch, sitting by the fire, taking long warm baths (which we did every 45 minutes, day and night, to relieve the pain). We did everything we could to make her feel hugged, when in reality, we were clinging to the edge trying to maintain our grip.

Finally, I got the call confirming Ellie was negative for the genetic mutation, and we were cleared to proceed to our next phase of treatment—precision radiation called proton therapy, which was only available to us in Jacksonville, Florida. This moment will go down as the most glorious release, the greatest exhale a human being can ever make. It changed every breath I’ll ever make again, and it changed my entire life. 

When we returned home to Canada after two months in Jacksonville, Ellie continued chemo at the POGO Satellite Clinic at Credit Valley Hospital—a warm and lovely treatment space not too far from our home. Her nurses, Lindsay and José, walked Ellie through every step of the process and gave her control over her treatment. We saw the same faces every week, which helped alleviate Ellie’s fears. And when she would get a fever in the middle of the night, we had our cozy, familial place to go to.

It's been 10 months and Ellie’s scars have healed, her hair has grown back and she is back in school and on all her favourite sports teams. But as I said before, cancer doesn’t have a clear ending. It’s not over when chemo is done or when a child rings the bell. Ellie’s collateral damage is still to be determined. There is the real possibility of complications later in life and we all live with the fear of relapse or secondary cancers when she’s older. 

Despite my worries, I find comfort in knowing that POGO is still on this journey with us post-treatment. Ellie will be monitored regularly for the rest of her life at a POGO AfterCare Clinic. If any late effects are detected, they will be caught early and treated, and the information about her childhood diagnosis and its treatment will continue to be available to us and used as a guide. 

I want to make note of a beautiful thing that happens during a child’s treatment. You’ll notice when a parent is talking about their child’s cancer, everything is framed as “we.” “We” have chemo today, “we” have a port flush, “we” have bloodwork, “we’re” being admitted. And families speak this way because our child is an extension of us—if they’re going through something, you better believe we’re going through it right beside them, every step of the way. 

I cannot speak for other families, but for ours, the “we” extended beyond our family unit. Arvinder, our POGO Interlink Nurse became part of our “we.” Lindsay and José at the POGO Satellite Clinic became part of our "we." Not merely as part of a service or an access point, but as part of our team and our family, who we simply could not have done this without.

To us, POGO is and forever will be part of our “we.” 

Adapted from Samantha Taylor's speech at the 2024 POGO PJ Party


A New Normal: My Post-cancer Reality

Adapted from Jacob's Speech at the 2023 POGO PJ Party

Before cancer, I was a very active high school student: I played the guitar, saxophone, piano and bass, and I was involved with the Burlington Teen Tour Band. I also stage-managed my school’s theatre program and worked at Cineplex Theatres part-time.

Everything changed the moment I was diagnosed with osteosarcoma (the same cancer as Terry Fox’s) in March 2019 at the age of 16. Immediately, I started to think about all the things I had planned but would have to miss due to treatments. It was a hard reality to face.

Over the next few months, I went through chemotherapy to shrink the tumour in my pelvis. Thankfully, I was able to take a break from treatment to go to France to perform with the Burlington Teen Tour Band. I was thrilled to spend time with my friends and not feel like the “sick guy.” It was one of the highlights of my cancer journey before what would eventually become the darkest time.

Shortly after coming back to Canada, I had surgery to remove the tumour. I was hopeful that the life I knew before my cancer diagnosis would be something I could get back to within a short period. I wasn’t at all prepared for what was to come post-surgery.

I stayed at the hospital for three more months to undergo additional chemotherapy. My experience was nothing short of a nightmare. I couldn’t sit up or move properly. I had blood clots, infections and blood transfusions. Every day I spent in a hospital room took a toll on my mental health. All I wanted was to be cleared to go home and to continue my treatment as an outpatient, but it got to a point where the end of treatment wasn’t even on my radar anymore.

Finally, after months of treatment, I was discharged from the hospital in August 2019. Though it was difficult for me to navigate my environment without my parents’ assistance, I was still happy to be back in the comfort of my home. It made all the difference for my mental health and gave me the space to adjust to a “new normal.”

With the support of my family, friends and incredible organizations like POGO, I went on to accomplish some amazing goals: I returned to school virtually and earned enough credits to graduate with my class; I went from using a wheelchair to crutches and started physical rehabilitation and; I started my Bachelor of Arts program in Popular Music Studies at the University of Western Ontario, where I joined the school’s marching band. I have dreams of becoming a professional music producer, and I’m excited to see where my learning takes me.

Like many childhood cancer survivors, my disease and its treatment have left a mark that has affected my cognitive function, ability to learn and retain math, and overall mobility. Only time will tell if these complications will ever improve, but I am content with where I am at in my journey.

I am grateful for the many kind and compassionate individuals at POGO who played, and will continue to play, a significant role in my transition from a childhood cancer patient to a survivor. This includes the POGO Transitions Counsellors who have helped me ensure that I’m set up for success in university, and the POGO AfterCare nurses who continue to provide me with post-treatment support at my Clinic.

It is an honour to have been given this opportunity to speak on behalf of the childhood cancer community. Though this is the first time I am sharing my story publicly, I hope that it will transcend the limits of this space and inspire children, youth, fellow survivors, and their families in some way.

By Jacob McKenzie


Childhood Cancer Survivors Share How Oncology Professionals Helped Shape Their Lives

POGO recruited five individuals whose lives have been impacted by a childhood cancer diagnosis and are now working in the field of pediatric oncology in different capacities, to work with Mike Lang, an expert in digital storytelling facilitation. Digital storytelling guides participants to use personal images and videos, voiceover narration, music, and various video-editing techniques to bring the meaningful moments of their life to the screen.

These stories, which premiered at the 2023 POGO Symposium in November, shed light on how the experience of having cancer as a young person, and the interactions with oncology professionals along the way, can shape a person's life profoundly. It is POGO’s hope that everyone who engages with these stories will learn something new about the childhood cancer experience, by seeing it through the eyes of survivors.

Alexx’s Story

Alexx was diagnosed with acute myeloblastic leukemia as a child.

Today, she is a child life specialist, using her firsthand experience as a childhood cancer survivor to advocate for children, youth, fellow survivors and their families with various diagnoses.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHYr-wOR9SM&feature=youtu.be

Lindsay’s Story

Lindsay was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma as a child.

Today, she is a pediatric oncology nurse, drawing from her personal journey as a childhood cancer survivor to care for children and youth with cancer.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNbkW6zg_LA&feature=youtu.be

Noor's Story

Noor had the misfortune of navigating both a cancer diagnosis and virtual school during the COVID-19 pandemic. Inspired by the oncology professionals who cared for her during treatment, she is now studying to become a nurse at Toronto Metropolitan University.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DK03EJk2QMU&t=7s

Eugene’s Story

Dr. Eugene Chang was a young medical student when he was diagnosed with Leukemia. His experiences as a patient helped him identify a gap in the system, which he has sought to fill since becoming Canada’s first physiatrist specializing in rehabilitation for cancer patients.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8XIVxnrbf0

Kirsten’s Story

Kirsten is a two-time childhood cancer survivor and a young adult cancer survivor.

A strong advocate for childhood cancer and young adult cancer survivors, she now works as POGO's Program Coordinator for clinical and support programs.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9OsOVLBDgw

Last updated: June 2024