Glioblastoma Survivor is Thriving Seven Years After Diagnosis

Charlie Benoit was told that he had a long road ahead of him when he was diagnosed with glioblastoma in 2011. More than seven years later, he’s still doing well—and by studying patients like Benoit, researchers hope to help other patients with this incurable form of brain cancer.

In 2011, Benoit, then 48, was getting ready to switch careers. The pharmaceutical representative had recently obtained his teaching license and was set to begin his first year as a high school science teacher.

But Benoit wasn’t able to enjoy the lead-up to the first day of school. In less than a month, he was involved in three minor car accidents, and he feared that something wasn’t right.

After Benoit’s optometrist noticed his vision in the lower right side of both eyes was severely limited, she demanded he see a neurologist. Within a few days, an MRI revealed a large mass, which sent Benoit to the emergency room.

“As the emergency department doctors and neurologists talked, I got up and started dancing with my wife,” Benoit says with a smile. “I knew if we didn’t laugh, we were going to cry.”

Charles Benoit.
Charles Benoit.

In less than a week, surgery was performed by Rose Du, MD, PhD, who was able to completely remove Benoit’s tumor. Weeks later, the pathology report revealed the diagnosis: Benoit had grade IV glioblastoma with an unfavorable MGMT marker , a diagnosis that carries an average life expectancy of 12 to 14 months.

Benoit immediately enrolled in a clinical trial under the care of David Reardon, MD, clinical director of the Center for Neuro-Oncology at Dana-Farber. The trial was testing the addition of a new PI3K/mTOR inhibitor—which aims to stop enzymes that play a central role in tumor cell growth—to the standard therapy for glioblastoma: radiation and chemotherapy.

After starting treatment, Benoit was forced to retire from teaching, since he had occasional short-term memory loss and couldn’t concentrate throughout the day. This development led to major bouts of depression, which Benoit learned to cope with after joining a cancer support group in Norwell, Mass.—one town over from his home in Scituate, Mass.

 “I needed to talk to someone who’s been through a cancer diagnosis before I could overcome my own,” he says.

Benoit finished chemotherapy in 2012 but continued taking the PI3K/mTOR inhibitor until it was discontinued in 2017, when researchers found that the addition of the inhibitor had not proven to be better than just radiation and chemotherapy. Benoit hasn’t received treatment since, but still meets with Reardon every other month for check-ups—and his tumor has not come back, despite the odds.

Benoit is now part of a small—but growing—group of brain tumor patients who are doing well long-term; the reasons behind this trend are not yet clear, according to Reardon. One current study aims to identify differences between patients like Benoit and patients whose tumors return quickly; researchers theorize that there could be differences in their immune systems. Immunotherapy also remains an area of focus for researchers; so far, it has shown promise in some clinical trials, but can’t yet be called a major advance against brain tumors.

“There is a desperate need for better therapies for brain cancer patients, and by studying patients like Charlie Benoit, I believe we are on the verge of getting there,” Reardon explains. 

Since his diagnosis, Benoit has participated in several patient support groups, including Dana-Farber’s One-to-One program. He has also been featured on the WEEI/NESN Jimmy Fund Radio-Telethon presented by Arbella Insurance Foundation, and last year, he served as the 2018 “Walk Hero” for Team Neuro in the Boston Marathon® Jimmy Fund Walk presented by Hyundai.

“I refuse to sit on the sidelines,” Benoit says. “I’m jumping in with both feet and looking to help in any way I can.”

Benoit is also grateful for the family milestones he’s been able to take part in, including two of his three sons’ graduations from high school—and he is looking forward to his eldest son’s upcoming college commencement ceremony.

“I’ve gotten to see some great things in my life—things I’d never thought I’d see, and I am truly thankful for that,” he says.

30 thoughts on “Glioblastoma Survivor is Thriving Seven Years After Diagnosis”

  1. Congratulations Charlie and your positivity, determination and will to live. I am on month 19 from my GBM diagnosis and doing well. I went through the standard radiation and chemo treatment and experienced a reoccurrence after only 9 months. I’ve then had a second surgery. I then tried immunotherapy and a bunch of other treatments but unfortunately after four months I experienced a second reoccurrence and a lot of swelling so no surgery. I have a favorable MGMT marker and I’m currently on Avastin and Chemo (conu). The Avastin seems to be working very well and keeps the swelling away. I hope to keep my current tumor stable. I am very positive, have strong faith and a strong will to live. I certainly give a lot of the glory to God as well. I also have an army behind me for support .

  2. Congratulations Charlie. Keep up the good fight! Our 26 year old son, Davey, battled this nasty disease for 16 months. During this period, he became impassioned to raise much-needed funds for brain cancer research under the direction of Dr. David Reardon. After he passed away, the CRUS11TOUR Initiative was established in his memory (2017) and over $1.2 million has been raised, including $605K in the 2018 PMC and another $90K in the 2018 Boston Marathon through Golf Fights Cancer. We encourage all that read this to support glioblastoma research at Dana-Farber or donate to Team CRUS11TOUR-PMC 2019 (http://profile.pmc.org/TC0304) as our collective efforts are making a real difference!!
    Thanks.
    Leigh & Dave Hovey

  3. I have cancer though it’s not GBM, but what I really appreciate so much about your happy news and equally happy disposition is that it gives all of us hope, despite what some doctors seem to think. I’m all for positive attitudes instead of negative comments from some doctors. I always think of Simone de Beavoir’s study of centenarians where she observed some characteristics of all of them: a good sense of humor, a tendency to domineer their children (oh well, no one’s perfect) and a will to live. When they finally died, their autopsies showed that they had every disease in the book, including cancer.

Comments are closed.