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      • He didn’t; it took a lot of urging before he did it, and when he did at first his doctors thought he had standard pancreatic adenocarcinoma, the deadly kind that few survive. As has been reported before, though, Jobs underwent a transduodenal biopsy, and the diagnosis of neuroendocrine tumor was made.
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  2. Oct 7, 2011 · Treating Jobs's cancer Endocrine cancer, the variety Jobs had, is treated with a different variety of chemotherapy drugs. Two new drugs for this type were just approved by the U.S. Food and Drug ...

  3. Aug 25, 2011 · October 5, 2011 11:37 p.m. EDT. Steve Jobs has said he was once told he should "expect to live no longer than three to six months." STORY HIGHLIGHTS. Steve Jobs found out he had a...

  4. Nov 7, 2011 · November 7, 2011 12:00 AM EST. A ll patients face difficult choices when they hear the words “You have cancer.” Steve Jobs, who died Oct. 5, was no different, though he tried one thing most...

  5. On World Neuroendocrine Tumor Awareness Day, Mitchell Berger shares his own experience with this rare type of cancer and examines what the media got wrong in reporting on Steve Jobs' death.

  6. Apr 18, 2024 · Doctors discovered Jobs’ cancer via a CT scan of his kidneys (the pancreas is near the left kidney). Jobs said in his biography that his urologist wanted him to get the scan due to a prior issue with kidney stones. They found a neuroendocrine tumor, a rare form of the disease. Steve Jobs (left) and Steve Wozniak, co-founders of Apple, 1977 ...

  7. Oct 6, 2011 · August 2004: Jobs, 49, told Apple employees in an email that he had been diagnosed with a cancerous tumor in his pancreas and had undergone a successful operation to remove it.

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