The tumor in Babb's chest was large: 15 cm. It occupied the whole right side of his lung and interfered with his lung function.
"It's a very special type of lung cancer called small cell, which is different from all non-small cell types," Kemme said. "When it is limited to just one half of the chest like with Derek, there is maybe a 20-30% chance of a 5-year cure. It's not the best, but there is a fighting chance. And this young kid has the most positive attitude."
At one point, Kemme told Babb that he may have only 6-9 months to live.
Babb admitted that the diagnosis was devastating, but he immediately wanted to beat it. He leans on family and friends, including Blackburn, for support, and they've helped him to hold onto that optimism.
"You've got to stay positive," Blackburn said. "When we first found out, another coworker was over that night, and she got home and Googled (small-cell lung cancer). Then I Googled it. I told Derek we have to figure out how to think positive about it and not about all the bad stuff I had just read. Then I told him, 'Please don't ever Google it.'"
Babb has always had a positive outlook on life - a trait his friends and family admire - and cancer wasn't going to change that.
"You keep positive and positive things happen to you. As dark as it can be, you stay positive and do the right thing, things will turn around for you," Babb said. "It is what it is, and I'm making the best out of the days I have remaining."