Norm Coleman announced Tuesday that he will undergo surgery later this month to remove part of his lungs after cancer re-emerged there.
"One thing I have learned with the beast that is my cancer is that no single battle wins the war," the former U.S. senator and St. Paul mayor wrote in a Facebook post that included humor amid the somber update. "With that in mind, my update to you is that the war has not yet been won but it most certainly has not been lost."
Last August, Coleman learned that the throat and neck cancer he began battling in 2015 had spread to his lungs and was at the most advanced stage. After heavy doses of chemotherapy, Coleman said the tumor was gone.
"There was no signs of cancer," he wrote.
Still, his doctors had him undergo a program of intensive radiation for five weeks in hopes of crushing the disease.
"But cancer is unrelenting," Coleman wrote, explaining that a follow-up PET scan showed a spot on his lungs that doctors thought could be either "radiation irritation" or a recurrence of the disease. Another PET scan five weeks later showed the spot had grown and a biopsy determined that the cancer had returned, apparently immune to the focused radiation.
"I'm not intending to give any quarter in this war against the beast," Coleman wrote, explaining that he'll undergo a video-assisted thoracoscopic left lower lobectomy, which will remove about a quarter of his lungs and cut his lung capacity by 15 to 20%.
"As I joked with a friend this afternoon, it simply means that if I were to run a marathon that at Mile 20 I would start to get winded," he wrote. "I will leave the marathons to others."