Newlyweds Among Thousands to Walk for Research at UC Brain Tumor Center
CINCINNATI—People diagnosed with a brain tumor cannot only survive, but they can also live happily ever after. At 8 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 23, at Sawyer Point, Walk Ahead for a Brain Tumor Cure will celebrate two young brain tumor survivors who found their perfect match and were married during the last year:
- Survivor Collin June, patient relations supervisor at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, and his wife, Rachel June, MD.
- Survivor Leslie Sommer, a fifth grade teacher and assistant women's soccer coach at Wittenberg University, and her husband, Roland Sommer.
The Junes and Sommers will enjoy a piece of post-wedding cake and then join more than 3,000 walkers and runners in the seventh annual event.
Since its founding in 2010, the 5k walk/run has raised more than $1.5 million for research and education at the Brain Tumor Center at the University of Cincinnati (UC) Gardner Neuroscience Institute and the UC Cancer Institute. The institutes are collaborations of the UC College of Medicine and UC Health.
An estimated 240,000 brain tumors are diagnosed in the United States each year; of these, 70,000 have originated in the brain and 170,000 have metastasized from other parts of the body.
Patients, physicians and researchers of the UC Brain Tumor Center will be available for interviews before, during and after the Oct. 23 event.
Walk Ahead 5k Schedule
7:30 a.m.: Same-day registration opens
8:30 a.m.: Shotgun start for chip-timed 5K run, beginning at Yeatman's Cove, Sawyer Point
9:00 a.m.: Shotgun start for 5k walk, beginning at Yeatman's Cove, Sawyer Point
More information:
Tags
Related Stories
Alabama.com: How a new self-test for HPV could be a game changer
April 19, 2024
The University of Cincinnati's Leeya Pinder was featured in an Alabama.com/Reckon article about how self-testing for HPV could make preventative care more accessible to those facing the most barriers.
WLWT: Tips to fight off bad allergy symptoms
April 18, 2024
The University of Cincinnati's Ahmad Sedaghat spoke with WLWT about how Cincinnati's geography tends to make allergy symptoms worse and tips to fight off those symptoms.
Medscape: Skin adverse events rare after immunotherapy to treat...
April 17, 2024
Medscape highlighted University of Cincinnati research published in JAMA Dermatology that found skin adverse events were rare following immunotherapy treatments for certain skin cancers.