Uplifting StoriesInspirationalBrain Cancer Survivor Paints the Caregivers Who Saved His Life

Brain Cancer Survivor Paints the Caregivers Who Saved His Life

After beating the odds against a deadly brain cancer, Vincent Serritella used his artistic talent to thank the doctors and nurses who helped him survive.

Vincent Serritella didn’t just beat a brain cancer that kills 19 of every 20 patients. He picked up a brush and painted portraits of the doctors and nurses who got him through it – 30 of them, one face at a time.

- Advertisement -

It started with flashing bright spots in the lower-left of his vision. Serritella, a former Pixar animator from the San Francisco Bay Area, wasn’t especially worried, but he wasn’t expecting open-brain surgery.

Scans at Sutter Health told a brutal story – stage 4 glioblastoma, an aggressive brain cancer only 5 to 7% of people survive. It spreads fast into healthy tissue, and the tumor a surgeon can see is rarely the whole of it.

He went through a brain resection, radiation and chemotherapy after being diagnosed in December. Against the odds, he is now cancer-free, with a second clean MRI on June 2.

Vincent Serritella with his paintings of Sutter Health employees
Vincent Serritella with his paintings of Sutter Health employees who helped him heal. (Photo: Lauren Segal)

In the middle of treatment, he started painting again – on his oncologist’s advice. Dr. Akanksha Sharma had urged him to lean into his creativity, telling him it helps build brain elasticity and may improve outcomes. Sharma had arrived at Sutter three years earlier, and Serritella credits her honesty as much as her care.

So he painted the people in the room with him. He has now finished 30 portraits of the doctors, nurses and caregivers who saw him through, among them surgeon Dr. Michael Zhang.

“100% I’m alive today because of them,” Serritella says in a video filmed by Sutter Health, which shows him at the easel surrounded by the finished faces.

Your inbox could use more of this. Smileworthy is a free weekly newsletter packed with uplifting stories and reasons to smile. Join 500,000+ readers today. Subscribe here.

- Advertisement -
Marissa and Vincent Serritella with Dr. Michael Zhang (Credit: Sutter Health)

For him, the brush was always going to be how he said thank you.

“Art is always something that’s been a constant since I was 5,” he said. “The highest form of gratitude from me is to let me paint your portrait.”

Each canvas is a likeness of someone who kept him alive – the care that carried him through the worst year of his life, hung where he can see all of it at once.

Join our community of more than 500,000 Happily followers.

More good news