Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania Woman Resigned to Being Plump Learns She Had 140-Pound Tumor

It was like a huge weight was lifted, and that’s because it was. A Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, woman lost 140 pounds when a surgeon removed a massive tumor from her body. NBC10’s Randy Gyllenhaal spoke with her about her experience.

Mary Clancey said she was resigned to being a "fat little old lady." Over 15 years, she kept getting bigger despite dieting. But with her health deteriorating, her son persuaded her to go to the hospital.

What doctors found astounded them: A cyst in one of her ovaries had grown into a 140-pound tumor.

Doctors at Lehigh Valley Health Network in Allentown removed the cancerous, Stage 1 mass in a five-hour operation on Nov. 10.

Lehigh Valley Health Network
Lehigh Valley Health Network
For many year, Mary Clancey has tried to lose weight. She would try dieting and exercising, but only get bigger over time. At that point, the Saint Clair woman believed she was destined to be a "short, fat, round, little old lady," she said.
Lehigh Valley Health Network
At 365 pounds, Clancey could barely walk or, even sometimes, get out of bed. In fact, as a result of the excess weight, blood clots developed in her legs.
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So, she went to Lehigh Valley Hospital - Cedar Crest last November to get tests done for her blood clots, but little did she know doctors would discover a huge surprise.
Lehigh Valley Health Network
Clancey was shocked to find out that a tumor had been gradually growing inside of her for about 16 years. "The first thing I thought was Sigourney Weaver with the Alien," she jokingly said. "I was so scared."
Lehigh Valley Health Network
Doctors at the Allentown hospital were surprised to find the 140-pound ovarian cyst as well, and planned to remove massive tumor.
Lehigh Valley Health Network
“The mass was so big it didn’t even fit in the frame of the scanner,” said Doctor Richard Boulay, who was assigned the task of removing the tumor.
Lehigh Valley Health Network
The 5-hour operation required two tables:one for Clancey and another for the tumor. Along with the 140-pound mass, doctors removed 40 pounds of extra skin. After the surgey, Clancey stayed at the hospital for 25 days for recovery.
Lehigh Valley Health Network
180 pounds lighter, Clancey feels more confident than ever.
Lehigh Valley Health Network
“I was going to be a short, fat, round, little old lady before, so you never know -- I might just turn into a voluptuous babe,” she joked.
NBC10
The 71-year-old, however, feels displeased that her old "beautiful" clothes -- sized at 3X-Large -- do not fit her anymore. "It's hard for me to part with the nice clothes I've bought," she said.

Clancey weighed 365 pounds heading into the operation. After five hours in surgery, she lost 180 pounds of tumor and tissue, about half her weight, the doctors said.

"You can't imagine in your wildest dreams something that huge," she told NBC10.

As she was gaining weight, Clancey, 71, of St. Clair, Pennsylvania, said doctors told her just to watch what she ate. At just over 5 feet tall, she said she felt destined to become "a short round, fat little old lady."

The tumor didn't really cause her pain. "It just made itself comfortable in there," she said.

But by the time she went to the hospital, it had become difficult for her to walk and even stand.

Dr. Richard Boulay, who performed the operation, said the mass was so big it didn't even fit in the picture taken by a CT scan.

"It was slowly killing her," Bouley said Thursday during a news conference at the hospital.

To help in the removal of the tumor, a second table had to be moved next to the one on which Clancey was lying so the mass could be rolled out without it rupturing, The Morning Call reported.

Made up predominantly of water, the tumor was "slippery and nasty," Boulay said.

After nearly a month in recovery, Clancey is back home, working to regain her balance as a lighter woman.

She weighs less than 150 pounds and said she feels great.

Doctors said tests show she is cancer-free and does not need further treatment, The Call reported.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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