Randy Pausch (born
October 23, 1960) is a Professor of Computer Science, Human-Computer
Interaction, and Design at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In September 2006, Pausch was diagnosed with
metastatic pancreatic cancer. He pursued a very aggressive cancer
treatment that included major surgery and experimental chemotherapy;
however, in August 2007, he was told the cancer had metastasized to his
liver and spleen. He then started palliative chemotherapy, intended to
extend his life as long as possible. At that time, doctors estimated he
would remain healthy for another three to six months
The "Last
Lecture" Pausch delivered his "Last Lecture," titled
"Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams," at CMU on September
18, 2007. This talk was modeled after an ongoing series of lectures
where top academics are asked to think deeply about what matters to
them, and then give a hypothetical "final talk," i.e.,
"what wisdom would you try to impart to the world if you knew it
was your last chance?" Before speaking, Pausch received a long
standing ovation from a large crowd of over 400 colleagues and students.
When he motioned them to sit down, saying, "Make me earn it,"
some in the audience shouted back, "You did!" During the
lecture, Pausch was upbeat and humorous, alternating between wisecracks,
insights on computer science and engineering education, advice on
building multi-disciplinary collaborations, working in groups and
interacting with other people, offering inspirational life lessons, and
performing push-ups on stage.
From Randy Pausch's
website-
Late in the summer of
2006, I started having some unusual symptoms, culminating with jaudice.
Scans revealed it was pancreatic cancer. At this time, my wife Jai and I
had a 4 year old, a 2 year old, and a three month old baby.
Pancreatic cancer is the
most deadly of cancers, with only a 4% 5-year survival rate. The only
hope is to be one of the 20% of patients (which I was) where surgery is
possible. I had a Whipple surgery on Sept 19th, 2006; Dr. Herbert Zeh
removed the (4.5cm) tumor, my gallbladder, 1/3rd of my pancreas, 1/3rd
of my stomach, and several feet of my small intestine. I was in the
hospital 11 days. Even with a successful Whipple surgery, only 15% of
pancreatic cancer patients make it to 5 years, and there is no concensus
about which chemotherapy and/or radiation after surgery helps. I found
the Virginia Mason protocol, where early trials were claiming to get 45%
of people to 5 years. However, it was an extremely toxic combination of
chemotherapy and daily radiation: a nation-wide trial was shut down
because several patients died from the treatment. There were two centers
still offering the treatment: Virginia Mason in Seattle, and MD Anderson
in Houston, and I was able to quality for the treatment in Houston. This
happened in a whirlwind: the treatment needed to start within 6-8 weeks
of the surgery. And Jai & I needed to figure out how to have
somebody stay with me full time, and also take care of our 3 kids.
I spent November and
December at MD Anderson receiving IV Cisplatin once a week, interferon
injections three times a week, continuous infusion 5-FU, and daily
radiation. Fortunately, Jai's brother and sister-in-law took in our
three kids (on top of their 8 and 12 year old), in Norfolk Virginia,
while Jai stayed with me in Houston. Every weekend, Jai flew to Norfolk
to be with our kids, and my sister Ruby or one of my friends (thank God
for Jessica Hodgins, Scott Sherman, and Jack Sheriff) would come stay
with me. I was also blessed with my colleague Chris Hoffmann, a CS
professor at Purdue who had been through this exact ordeal two years
prior: his encouragment and practical tips were invaluable in getting
through the treatment. The less I say about Houston the better, but by
the end I was barely able to walk, and my weight (starting at 182)
dropped to 138.
The next four months of
chemo (continuous infusion 5-FU) was back in Pittsburgh, through May
2007. Now, I'm 168 pounds and look normal. (To answer everybody's first
question, no, my hair never fell out). One additional treatment is a
vaccine done at Johns Hopkins: I don't expect it will change my odds
much, but it can't hurt. I still have digestive inconveniences from the
Whipple surgery: I have to eat 5 small meals a day and take pills with
each meal, and I have some abdominal cramping from time to time. A small
price to pay for walking around.
In August of 2007, we
learned that the cancer had returned, having metastasized to my liver
and spleen, which is a death sentence. At that time, the doctors gave me
an estimate of having 3-6 months of healthy living left.
On Oct 1st, we learned
that the first round of palliative chemotherapy was working, and that I
would likely be "more like the 6 than like the 3 in that
estimate."
As of December, 2007, the
palliative chemo (gemcitabine+tarceva) is working, and the doctors' best
estimate is that it will continue to work for another 2-4 months (that's
a guess; it's obviously a bell shaped curve); then the tumors will once
again start to grow. There aren't many good "plan Bs" out
there after that.
My wife Jai has been an
incredible source of stability and courage through all this. We both
agree that "you can't control the cards you're dealt, just how you
play the hand."
July 25 2008 PITTSBURGH -
Randy Pausch, a Carnegie Mellon University computer scientist whose
"last lecture" about facing terminal cancer became an Internet
sensation and a best-selling book, died Friday. He was 47.
Pausch died at his
home in Virginia, university spokeswoman Anne Watzman said. Pausch and
his family moved there last fall to be closer to his wife's relatives.
Pausch was diagnosed with incurable pancreatic cancer in September 2006.
His popular last lecture at Carnegie Mellon in September 2007 garnered
international attention and was viewed by millions on the Internet. In
it,
Pausch celebrated
living the life he had always dreamed of instead of concentrating on
impending death. "The lecture was for my kids, but if others are
finding value in it, that is wonderful," Pausch wrote on his Web
site. "But rest assured; I'm hardly unique.