
Several Auburn University graduates and more than a dozen North Carolina residents have all developed a rare form of eye cancer in a case that has left doctors baffled.
Ocular melanoma is diagnosed to about 2,500 people a year but statistics show two towns – Auburn, Ala., and Huntersville, N.C. – have a high number of patients living with the cancer, Healthline reported earlier this month.
“We see patients from all over the country and some patients from outside of the country. Certainly if we have patients who know each other or who lived and grew up in the same town, that has been kind of a red flag for us in trying to figure out if there’s something else going on,” Dr. Marlana Orloff, an oncologist at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia, told Healthline.
Auburn, the home to one of the state’s largest universities, has about 63,000 people living in the city. Thirty-six Auburn graduates have been diagnosed with the rare cancer, including a group of friends who developed it years apart. In Huntersville, 18 people were diagnosed with the cancer.
Juleigh Green, Allison Allred and Ashley McCrary were all friends during their university days and were astonished to learn they all shared the same cancer.
“What’s crazy is literally standing there, I was like, ‘Well, I know two people who’ve had this cancer,'” McCrary told CBS News on Monday.
Ocular melanoma develops in cells that produce eye pigment and can be detected when a person’s eyes form spots, Healthline reported. Symptoms include “blurry or distorted vision, a blind spot in your vision, seeing ‘flashing’ lights or a dark spot in your field of vision.” Treatment for the cancer include surgery and in some cases removing the entire eye. There is no known cure for the cancer.
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SOURCE: Fox News, Kathleen Joyce