Martha Kaiser: From Melanoma Diagnosis to Genetic Discovery – A Journey of Agency and Ancestry
Guest: Martha Kaiser
Theme: Walking with CDKN2A, Ancestral Discovery, and Agency in Rare Genetic Mutations
Episode Summary
When Martha Kaiser discovered she carries the rare CDKN2A gene mutation—known for elevating risks of melanoma and pancreatic cancer—her journey shifted from uncertainty, loss, and family trauma to active agency and deep exploration. In this conversation, she shares not only the medical dimensions of living with a lesser-known mutation, but how intergenerational silence, gut intuition, and the drive to protect her children led her to become both a patient advocate and a creative genealogist, tracing the roots and ripple effects of her family’s cancer history. Her story explores how knowledge, connection, and community can bring both practical peace and a kind of healing across generations.
We Cover
The emotional backdrop: losing her mother young to multiple cancers, and carrying a sense of unspoken family trauma
How shifting cancer narratives across generations inspired Martha’s vow for transparency and openness with her own children
The surprise and shock of receiving a positive CDKN2A result after full-panel genetic testing (having initially been tested for BRCA)
Navigating surveillance for pancreatic, brain, and breast cancers with annual MRIs, endoscopies, and proactive self-advocacy
Turning to genealogy—and partnering with Connect My Variant and BYU researchers—to untangle the ancestral origins of her “typo” and connect with long-lost relatives
Processing the identity shift and agency that comes with rare mutation status: from isolation to making new friends and finding meaning as an advocate
Reframing medical anxiety: how regular imaging, informed conversations, and community lessen the burden of living with ongoing risk
The evolving relationship with guilt, responsibility, and legacy after learning she passed her mutation on to two of her three children
Claiming the power of knowledge—and the importance of finding your people
Highlights & Takeaways
“It finally kind of put some validity to this… thought that I was growing melanoma for no reason.”
Intergenerational silence around illness can be shifted—with honesty, consent, and honoring each child’s readiness to know.
Agency in rare mutations includes not just self-care, but reaching out to others—family, friends, and online communities—for knowledge, relief, and the possibility of healing old wounds.
Surveillance isn’t just clinical; it can be emotionally stabilizing, creating peace in uncertain bodies and family systems.
There can be empowerment, relief, and even beauty in hunting down the “typo” in the family tree—and meeting kin who share it.
Community, data, and emotional support aren’t separate—a rare mutation journey is richer with all three.
Content Note
This episode includes discussion of parental illness and death, intergenerational trauma, genetic guilt, and medical anxiety.
Resources Mentioned
Connect My Variant – a project for connecting families who share rare genetic variants
My Faulty Gene (Kathy Baker’s resource for hereditary cancer support)
Connect
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