Graduating During a Cross-Country Clinical Trial
During his senior year of high school, Bryce enrolled in a clinical trial in Boston, where researchers were testing new drug combinations for resistant osteosarcoma.
His parents worked out the logistics so one of them could be in Boston with him for four weeks while the other could stay in California with Peyton. After that, Bryce could return home and continue his treatment.
From his hospital bed, Bryce finished the last two classes he needed to graduate from high school. He was determined not to miss the ceremony, even if he was thousands of miles away. His friends FaceTimed him so he could be part of it from Massachusetts.
While in Boston, Bryce was able to embrace his love of baseball. He watched a Red Sox game, toured Fenway Park, and met some major league players.
But during Bryce’s fourth week of treatment, both of his lungs collapsed.
“We spent the next three weeks in Boston Children’s having surgery and trying to get his lungs back so that we could get home,” Jenni says.
They arrived home the day before Father’s Day in 2022. In early July, the San Francisco Giants gave Bryce the same major league baseball experience he had with the Red Sox.
“He got to meet a whole bunch of players, including Logan Webb, their star pitcher, who is from our area, so he is a hometown hero,” Jenni says.
Struggling to Breathe
Radiation helped slow the cancer in Bryce’s hip, but nothing was working for his lungs. The clinical trial treatment bought him time, but he was not improving.
After he turned 18 in September 2022, his lungs got worse. He needed oxygen at home, and over time, even that was not enough.
By October, he was in the intensive care unit on a breathing machine. His parents knew it was time to let him go. He passed on October 12.
“He made it nine months longer than he should have. He fought for a really long time. He never let his spirit be defeated,” Jenni says.
Creating a Legacy
It was Bryce’s wish that other kids would not have to face osteosarcoma, so his family started the Bryce Bazor Foundation, focused on awareness, research, and funding. The foundation contributes to The Osteosarcoma Institute due to the two organizations’ shared goals.
“So many people gave to us in our time of need, and we want to be able to give back to other people who need it,” Jenni says.
The foundation gives them a way to remember Bryce, and it provides an outlet for the grief they struggle with every day.
“Giving to other families fills a big hole in my heart,” Jim says.