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    • Jobs underwent surgery to remove his tumor

      • On July 31, 2004, at the Stanford University Medical Clinic in Palo Alto, California, Jobs underwent surgery to remove his tumor. "This weekend I underwent a successful surgery to remove a cancerous tumor from my pancreas," Jobs wrote in an e-mail to Apple's staff the next week.
  1. Oct 7, 2011 · Despite having the same name, the diseases that killed Apple co-founder Steve Jobs and 2011 Nobel laureate Ralph Steinman are different kinds of cancer. Researchers are looking for new ways...

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  3. Oct 24, 2011 · According to Steve Jobs ’ biographer, Walter Isaacson, the Apple mastermind eventually came to regret the decision he had made years earlier to reject potentially life-saving surgery in favor...

  4. 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.

  5. Oct 20, 2011 · Steve Jobs told his biographer, Walter Isaacson, that he put off surgery for pancreatic cancer for nine months, and later regretted it. Jobs was a believer in alternative medicine, and told Isaacson he didn't want his body opened.

    • The Rise of Steve Jobs and Apple
    • How Did Steve Jobs Die?
    • The Legacy of A Tech Titan

    Born on February 24, 1955, in San Francisco, California, Steven Paul Jobs was given up by his biological parents early on. He was adopted by Paul and Clara Jobs as a baby. When he was six years old, a young neighbor told him that his adoption meant “your parents abandoned you and didn’t want you.” Jobs’ adoptive parents assured him that wasn’t true...

    In 2003, Steve Jobs went to the doctor for kidney stones. But the doctors soon noticed a “shadow” on his pancreas. They told Jobsthat he had a neuroendocrine islet tumor, a rare form of pancreatic cancer. In a way, it was good news. People diagnosed with neuroendocrine islet tumors generally have a far better prognosis than those with other forms o...

    Though time marched on after Steve Jobs’ death, he left a lingering impression on the world. By 2018, over 2 billion iPhones had been sold — changing how people communicated and lived their lives. “I’m going to remember him as always being [of] very quick mind,” saidSteve Wozniak following Steve Jobs’ death, “and almost all the time that we had dis...

    • Kaleena Fraga
  6. Nov 7, 2011 · Steve Jobs, who died Oct. 5, was no different, though he tried one thing most people don’t–having his entire genome and that of his cancer decoded. This can expose the tumor’s genetic ...

  7. Oct 5, 2011 · In 2004, Jobs underwent surgery to remove the cancer from his pancreas. In 2009, after taking another leave of absence from Apple, Jobs had a liver transplant in an effort to retain as much of...

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