Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month: A survivor's story on the importance of screening

March 19, 2025

Regina Lassabe is a behavioral health therapist here at Infinity Health. Colorectal Cancer Awareness month is not only important to her, it is personal. Regina is a colon cancer survivor. Read her story below!

“At the age of 29 I went to the doctor hoping to get a colonoscopy to confirm I had diverticulitis (Diverticula are small, bulging pouches that can form in the lining of your digestive system). Since I had pain that persistented and would last for a few days, abdominal tenderness and dark blood and bright red blood in my stool, the doctor decided to do an endoscopy and a colonoscopy. I’ll never forget the doctor coming in after the procedure telling me that my endoscopy looked so good, he almost didn’t do the colonoscopy, but he stated since I did the prep he might as well do it. He proceeded to tell me that when he viewed my colon it was as like looking at a 50-year-olds colon. He had found many polyps in my colon but one stood out the most. He took a biopsy of the polyp to determine if it was cancer. I finally received a call a few days later with the word “It is cancerous”. I remember just a week prior I was crying because I was going to turn 30 in a few months and now I was crying begging and praying to see 30. Colon cancer? How? I have no family history of colon cancer. I was a wife and a mother of three who I wanted to see grow up. I saw a future that I may never get to see.

About a week later the doctor decided to do another colonoscopy to remove the cancerous polyp and referred me to see an oncologist and that is when they told me due to the grading of the cancer it was recommend removing part of my colon. There was no question about it I was going to have a colon resection to remove part of my colon in hopes that I would not have to have any more treatments like Chemo or radiation.

It was set into motion, I went in and had part of my colon removed. I struggled in the beginning with the resection, but I was so lucky to be alive and to catch this early. The doctor told me if I had waited till “screening age” I may not have made it. I had so much support through this time from family, friends, co-workers, and church community that helped give me strength to move forward. I walked around for years with a gnarly scar but was able to look down and say this was a battle scar and has given me life.

I started off with having one colonoscopy every year for about 5 years and then “graduated” to having them every two years, which I will continue every 2 years for the rest of my life. Each colonoscopy that I get they remove polyps and I like to look at it as another year of living. My doctors recommend all my children get screened at the age of 19, 10 years prior to my diagnosis to ensure they catch any polyp growth. Get screened I tell them, don’t wait, you are never too young.

At 41 years old, I am grateful to be alive. That colonoscopy truly saved my life. I’ve had the joy of watching two of my children graduate, and my youngest will graduate this May. It allowed me to witness my daughter and son marry the loves of their lives and see the happiness in their eyes when they look at their spouses. I’ve seen my youngest boy grow into an incredible young man. It also gave me the chance to earn my Master’s Degree and become a mental health therapist. I would undergo that colonoscopy again and again to secure my future.
Every two years, I have a colonoscopy scheduled, and my next one is this month to stay on top of the screening.
You are never too young!”