"We've got this."
In 2021, you met Kenedi Schoeneck and her family from Wisconsin. Kenedi was only six years old when she was diagnosed with a rare childhood malignancy in her kidney known as Wilms’ tumor. Worse still, the tumor had burst, increasing the risk of cancer spreading to other parts of Kenedi’s body.
"As a parent, when you see that CT scan up on the screen, you’re completely breaking down," remembers her dad, Dylan. "Our doctor was staying super calm. I asked her, 'Are you staying calm to keep us calm, or are you staying calm because you’ve got this?' She just looked me right in the eye and said, 'We’ve got this.'"
Decades ago, oncologists like Kenedi’s doctor, Wendy Allen-Rhoades, MD, PhD at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, wouldn’t have been able to speak with such confidence. Four out of every five children with Kenedi’s form of cancer did not survive. Patients like Kenedi are benefitting from years of studies, clinical trials, and research into the Wilms’ tumor, and from researchers like Dr. Allen-Rhoades. A Young Investigator Award (YIA) grant from Conquer Cancer launched Dr. Allen-Rhoades' research, which guided her as she saw Kenedi through 15 rounds of chemotherapy, surgery, and seven rounds of radiation – all during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Today, Kenedi is healthy, and she and her family bravely tell their survival story with gratitude for Conquer Cancer donors who make lifesaving treatments possible.
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Kenedi and her parents
We invited Kenedi to turn her story into a song.

Meet more Conquer Cancer-funded researchers like Dr. Allen-Rhoades.
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