_
Cancer doesn't care who you are — it can strike anyone, at anytime. Join us as we take a look at some of the stars who've publicly faced the disease over the years…
On Feb. 9, 2024, a news station in the Miami area reported that former NFL star O.J. Simpson — who became a major pop culture figure in 1994 when he was accused of murdering his former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ron Goldman — had been diagnosed with prostate cancer and was undergoing chemotherapy in Las Vegas. There were also whispers that he'd been placed in hospice care.
After the news made headlines, The Juice took to X to deny it. "Hospice? Hospice! … No, I'm not in any hospice. I don't know who put that out there. … [You] can't trust the media," he said, adding that he was "hosting a ton of friends for the Super Bowl here in Las Vegas" and that "all is well."
O.J. previously said that he "unfortunately caught cancer" and "did the whole chemo thing" in a rambling video he shared on X back in May 2023. He did not specify what kind of cancer he'd faced. "I'm healthy now. It looks like I beat it. I'm happy about that," he said at the time.
He lost his cancer battle on April 10, 2024.
Keep reading for more stars who've battled cancer over the years…
MORE: Follow Wonderwall on MSN for more celebrity & entertainment photo galleries and content
_
Actress Olivia Munn took to Instagram in March 2024 to reveal that she was diagnosed with breast cancer nearly a year earlier and underwent a double mastectomy and reconstructive surgery.
In a lengthy post, she detailed the timing and shared more information in hopes "others find comfort, inspiration and support on their own journey," she explained.
In February 2023, Olivia took a genetic test that looked at 90 genes to assess her cancer risk. Both she and her sister learned they were negative for BRCA mutations — the most common breast cancer risk indicator. But two months later, the "The Newsroom" actress — who was 42 at the time — learned she had breast cancer.
"I wouldn't have found my cancer for another year — at my next scheduled mammogram — except that my OBGYN, Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi, decided to calculate my Breast Cancer Risk Assessment Score. The fact that she did saved my life," Olivia — who shares a young son with comedian John Mulaney — explained in a statement.
"Dr. Aliabadi looked at factors like my age, familial breast cancer history, and the fact that I had my first child after the age of 30. She discovered my lifetime risk was at 37%. Because of that score I was sent to get an MRI, which led to an ultrasound, which then led to a biopsy. The biopsy showed I had Luminal B cancer in both breasts. Luminal B is an aggressive, fast moving cancer," Olivia continued.
She had a double mastectomy 30 days later.
"I'm lucky. We caught it with enough time that I had options. I want the same for any woman who might have to face this one day. Ask your doctor to calculate your Breast Cancer Risk Assessment Score. Dr. Aliabadi says that If the number is greater than 20%, you need annual mammograms and breast MRIs starting at age 30," Olivia wrote.
She went on to share her gratitude for her partner and her many doctors. "I'm so thankful to my friends and family for loving me through this. I'm so thankful to John for the nights he spent researching what every operation and medication meant and what side effects and recovery I could expect," she wrote, "For being there before I went into each surgery and being there when I woke up, always placing framed photos of our little boy Malcolm so it would be the first thing I saw when I opened my eyes."
_
After Shannen Doherty was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2015, she underwent a mastectomy, chemotherapy and radiation. Two years later in 2017, she revealed that she was in remission. But by 2019, her cancer had returned and in early 2020, the "Beverly Hills, 90210" and "Charmed" actress announced it had metastasized.
"I'm stage 4. So my cancer came back," she told ABC News at the time. "It's a bitter pill to swallow in a lot of ways." Shannen confessed she was afraid, explaining, "There are definitely days where I say, 'Why me?' And then I go, 'Why not me? Who else?' Who else besides me deserves this? None of us do."
In June 2023, she revealed that she'd been undergoing radiation after the cancer spread to her brain. She posted videos of herself being fitted for a special mask that's worn while receiving radiation treatments in an enclosed machine. "My fear is obvious. I am extremely claustrophobic and there was a lot going on in my life," she captioned one of the clips, perhaps also referring to her looming decision to divorce her husband of 11 years. Days later, Shannen revealed that in January 2023, she underwent surgery. "I had a tumor in my head they wanted to remove and also biopsy. I am clearly trying to be brave but I am petrified. The fear was overwhelming to me," she shared alongside a video of herself being prepped to go under.
In a November 2023 cover story with People magazine, she opened up more about her cancer, which has spread to her bones. "I don't want to die," Shannen said. "I'm not done with living. I'm not done with loving. I'm not done with creating. I'm not done with hopefully changing things for the better. I'm just not — I'm not done." She explained that she believes "my greatest memory is yet to come," and until then, she added, "I pray. I wake up and go to bed thanking God, praying for the things that matter to me without asking for too much. It connects me to a higher power and spirituality."
She also wants to be pragmatic. On an April 2024 episode of her podcast, "Let's Be Clear With Shannen Doherty," the actress revealed that she'd started getting rid of her belongings. "The cancer, for me, has really made me take stock of my life and shift my priorities, and my priority at the moment is my mom," she explained. "I don't want her to have a bunch of stuff to deal with. I don't want her to have four storage units filled with furniture because I have a furniture obsession." She admitted that even though "it feels like you're giving up on something that was very special and important to you," she also feels "that it's the right thing to do" because "it's going to give you a sense of peace and a sense of calm because you're helping the people that you leave behind just have a cleaner, easier transition."
MORE: Stars we lost in 2023
_
Catherine, Princess of Wales, announced in March 2024 that she's been diagnosed with cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy. The British royal, who was 42 at the time, shared the news in a video message recorded by the BBC after a prolonged absence from the spotlight following an unspecified abdominal surgery she underwent in January 2024.
She began her message by thanking those who'd sent their "support and understanding" since the surgery, the cause of which Kensington Palace did not disclose.
"In January, I underwent major abdominal surgery in London, and at the time, it was thought that my condition was noncancerous," Princess Kate said in the video. "The surgery was successful. However, tests after the operation found cancer had been present. My medical team therefore advised that I should undergo a course of preventative chemotherapy and I am now in the early stages of that treatment."
Kate said she initially kept the news private for the sake of her health, her recovery and her children.
"This, of course, came as a huge shock, and William and I have been doing everything we can to process and manage this privately for the sake of our young family," she said. "As you can imagine, this has taken time. It has taken me time to recover from major surgery in order to start my treatment. But, most importantly, it has taken us time to explain everything to George, Charlotte and Louis in a way that is appropriate for them, and to reassure them that I am going to be OK."
After assuring viewers her husband, Prince William, has been a "great source of comfort," Kate asked for "time, space and privacy" while she completes her treatment.
"At this time, I am also thinking of all those whose lives have been affected by cancer," she concluded. "For everyone facing this disease, in whatever form, please do not lose faith or hope. You are not alone."
In early February 2024, Buckingham Palace confirmed Kate's father-in-law, King Charles III, had also been diagnosed with "a form of cancer" and had begun treatment.
_
Buckingham Palace announced on Feb. 5, 2024, that King Charles III had been diagnosed with "a form of cancer."
"During The King's recent hospital procedure for benign prostate enlargement, a separate issue of concern was noted. Subsequent diagnostic tests have identified a form of cancer. His Majesty has today commenced a schedule of regular treatments, during which time he has been advised by doctors to postpone public-facing duties," the palace said in a statement, adding that "throughout this period, His Majesty will continue to undertake State business and official paperwork as usual."
"The King is grateful to his medical team for their swift intervention, which was made possible thanks to his recent hospital procedure. He remains wholly positive about his treatment and looks forward to returning to full public duty as soon as possible. His Majesty has chosen to share his diagnosis to prevent speculation and in the hope it may assist public understanding for all those around the world who are affected by cancer," the statement continued.
_
Reclusive fitness icon Richard Simmons took to Facebook in March 2024 to reveal that he'd recently been diagnosed with skin cancer.
"Mirror mirror on the wall what's that blemish which is so small? There was this strange looking bump under my right eye. I had a tube of neosporin which I would put on [in] the morning and the evening… It was still there. It was time to call my dermatologist," he began a lengthy post. "I sat in his chair and he looked at it through a magnifying mirror. He told me he would have to scrape it and put it under the microscope. Now I am getting a little bit nervous. He comes back about 20 minutes later and says the C word. You have cancer. I asked him what kind of cancer and he said. Basel Cell Carcinoma. I told him to stop calling me dirty names. He laughed."
"You have to go to a cancer doctor right away. But now that you are here I suggest you put some Botox in your forehead lines and your smile lines and let's pump up those cheeks of yours… I patted him on his hand and said, 'Not today, doctor,'" Richard continued. "When I got home I called Dr Ralph A. Massey who was from England. I waited in his waiting room and said hello to all of these people who had skin cancer as well. I was shocked to see all of the skin cancers that they had. Some had cancer on top of their heads… their face… and their neck."
"The nurse said, 'Dr would like to see you now Richard.' I slowly walked in this pristine room and Dr Massey came in to greet me…' I have to apologize I just finished eating lox, bagels, and onions.' He smelled like a deli. But I didn't care I just needed his help," the exercise legend shared. "He explained that he has to burn my skin to remove the cancer cells. There was no numbing it just had to be done with a small instrument. As he started burning my skin a tear dropped down my cheek. You can't cry during this and he wiped my tear. The burning really hurt my skin. It lasted about 30 minutes. 'Come back in an hour and a half and see if I got it all out.'
"After driving around the city, I went back to some sad news. I didn't get it all out. He burned my face again. This time was worse than before… It was deeper. I did not cry this time but I did grit my teeth. 'Come back in another hour and a half.' Well the third time was a charm. With a smile on his face, he said, 'We got all the cancer cells out.' I gave him a hug. We are not done yet I have to stitch your face up. It took about 45 Minutes and I was done. 'I don't want to see you back here again.'
"Before I left, he checked my arms, my back, my chest and my legs. I had a little Frankenstein under my right eye for a while. He gave me some cream to put on it which I did religiously. Because of his fine work I don't have a scar," Richard added.
He then shared some stories about friends who had much tougher experiences with cancer and asked his followers to "promise me you will see your doctor and get a complete check up."
_
Supermodel Christie Brinkley took to Instagram in March 2024 — a month after her 70th birthday — to reveal that she had surgery to remove skin cancer on her face.
"The good news for me is we caught the basal cell Carcinoma early. And I had great Doctors that removed the cancer and stitched me up to perfection like an haute couture Dior," she captioned a series of post-surgery photos. "The good news for you is that all of this can be avoided by being diligent with your sun protection! I got serious a bit late so now for this ole mermaid/gardener, I'll be slathering on my SPF 30, reapplying as needed, wearing long sleeves and a wide brim hat. And doing regular total body check ups… that is a MUST!"
She also shared how she discovered the cancer: "I was lucky to find mine, because I was accompanying one of my daughters to HER check up… The Doctor was looking at each freckle with a magnifying glass… it wasn't my appointment so I wasn't going to say anything but at the VERY end I asked if he could just look at a little tiny dot I could feel as I applied my foundation. He took a look and knew immediately it needed a biopsy! He did it then and there!" Christie shared. "So make your own good luck by making that check up appointment today. And slather up my friends!"
_
Ice skating legend Scott Hamilton — who won gold at the 1984 Sarajevo Olympics — was diagnosed with testicular cancer in the '90s and went into remission in 1997 after being treated with surgery and chemotherapy.
He was then diagnosed with a brain tumor for the first time in 2004 and for the second time in 2010; he underwent surgery for both. In 2016, he revealed he'd been diagnosed with a third brain tumor. He was offered surgery again, but this time, he declined. "I said, 'I think I'm going to go home and get strong,'" Scott recalled to People magazine in February 2024, explaining, "I was just answering my spirit."
Remarkably, he learned during his next two rechecks that the tumor was shrinking. "I said to my surgeon, 'Can you explain this?' And he said, 'God,'" Scott shared.
But soon, it began to grow again. Scott had a decision to make. "I realized, I'm totally at peace with not even looking at it again unless I become symptomatic," he said. "The ace I have up my sleeve is that now there is a targeted radiation therapy that will shrink the tumor," he added. "And in that, I can avoid a lot of other things like surgery and chemo. So I don't know, I'm mostly trying to be in the moment and taking all the information and do the right thing when the time comes."
_
A royal is facing a second cancer diagnosis.
Sarah, Duchess York, underwent surgery after being diagnosed with breast cancer following a routine mammogram, her spokesman announced on June 25, 2023. The former Sarah Ferguson — affectionately known as Fergie — "was advised she needed to undergo surgery, which has taken place successfully," her spokesman told BBC News, adding that the British royal had been "symptom free" before her mammogram and "believes her experience underlines the importance of regular screening."
On June 26, 2023, the duchess shared more about her diagnosis on an episode of her "Tea Time" podcast that was recorded the day before she underwent a single mastectomy. She explained that her sister is the one who urged her to not put off her mammogram. "It was after bank holiday, and I live in this area — in the Windsor area — and it was a hot day and I didn't feel like going to London. It's easy to put it off — 'I'll do it next week,'" she explained. "My sister, who's wonderful from Australia, I always normally do what she says because she gets so cranky. She said, 'No — go. I need you to go. I need you to go." So she did.
Weeks later in August 2023, as she continued to heal, Fergie shared on her podcast that she'd named her reconstructed breast "Derek," explaining that personalizing it was a way to help her move forward. As for choosing that name, she said, "I don't know. It just made me laugh." Turning serious, though, she explained, "He is very important; he saved my life. … Now I have a friend, Derek, with me all the time who is protecting me with his shield of armor."
Just months later in January 2024, the duchess confirmed she's been diagnosed with a second form of cancer. "Following her diagnosis with an early form of breast cancer this summer, Sarah, Duchess of York has now been diagnosed with malignant melanoma," her spokesperson said in a statement, revealing that the news came after the royal had several moles removed and analyzed while undergoing reconstructive surgery following her mastectomy.
Fergie is remaining positive. "It was thanks to the great vigilance of my dermatologist that the melanoma was detected when it was," she shared on Instagram on Jan. 22, 2024. "Naturally another cancer diagnosis has been a shock but I'm in good spirits and grateful for the many messages of love and support."
_
Country music star Toby Keith took to Instagram in June 2022, to publicly share his diagnosis — and hope — with fans. "Last fall I was diagnosed with stomach cancer," he wrote. "I've spent the last 6 months receiving chemo, radiation and surgery. So far, so good. I need time to breathe, recover and relax." Five months later in November 2022, the "Beer for My Horses" singer told the CMT Hot 20 Countdown he was starting to think about getting "back in fighting shape" but that he still needed "a little bit of time to just rest up and heal up. It's pretty debilitating to have to go through all that," Toby said, "but as long as everything stays hunky dory, then we'll look at something good in the future."
In June 2023 — a year after he first publicly revealed his diagnosis — Toby shared a new update: His tumor has shrunk by a third. "I'm feeling pretty good. Basically, everything is in a real positive trend," he told The Oklahoman, which reported that the singer, who was still undergoing chemotherapy — he's also getting immunotherapy treatment and seeing a nutritionist — wants to see if he can handle some live shows. "I've got more wind," he said. "And I'm thinking about bringing the band in and setting up, playing two or three days somewhere just to see if I can get through two hours." If he can do it, Keith said, he'll be "out on the road this fall. … "All I gotta do is see if I can get through two or three nights of work and get a little break in this chemo, and we'll go back to work."
On February 5, 2024, Toby Keith passed away after a three year battle with cancer. He leaves behind his wife of four decades and their three children.
_
Nicole Eggert was diagnosed with stage 2 cribriform carcinoma breast cancer in December 2023 at 51.
The "Baywatch" and "Charles in Charge" actress initially attributed her symptoms — she gained 25 pounds in three months and had "terrible pain" in her left breast in October 2023 — to menopause. Then she felt a lump. "It really was throbbing and hurting," she told People magazine in January 2024. "I immediately went to my general practitioner and she told me I had to immediately go get it looked at. But the problem was I just couldn't get an appointment. Everything was booked. So I had to wait until the end of November to get it done."
After a mammogram and three biopsies confirmed doctors' cancer fears, Nicole learned she needed surgery, but as of early January 2024, she was still waiting for an oncologist to determine the best order of her treatment, which is expected to include surgery, chemotherapy and radiation. "I have panics where I'm like, just get this out of me," she said. "You sit there and it's in you and you're like, every second that passes and it's inside of me. It's growing, and you're just like, you just want it out."
Her "biggest fear," she added, is not being around for her daughters, one of whom is an adult. "I [also] have a 12-year-old at home where I'm the only caregiver. I have no family. I have nothing," Nicole said. "It immediately made me realize, there's just no succumbing to this. This is something I have to get through. This is something that I have to beat. She needs me more than anything and anybody."
_
Former "The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" alum Teddi Mellencamp Arroyave — who's the daughter of rock star John Mellencamp — began her battle with melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, in 2022. That March, she learned she had melanoma in situ, meaning the cancer had not spread beyond the outer layer of skin. In October the same year, she was diagnosed with stage 2 melanoma on her back.
By September 2023, she'd been diagnosed with her 13th melanoma in a year. Her treatment plan included surgery to remove the cancerous areas, rechecks every three months and an immunotherapy cream.
But in December 2023, she shared bad news. "I just had a big ol' cry," she shared on her Instagram Story, later posting a photo of her scarred back. "I just got the call from my doctor that the immunotherapy did not work, it was not successful. So I have two different options. I can either do a big skin graft of my stomach or my arm but it's a very long recovery or I can go in and get another wide excision surgery on Dec. 26. And they'll have a plastic surgeon come in too because it's such a big area and then just keep getting my checks every three months," she explained, adding, "So that's where we are. Get your skin checked, folks."
In January 2024, Teddi shared some good news: "I got the final report back from my oncologist," she revealed on social media, revealing that the surgery was a success — for now. Though her doctor noted there were still "some atypical areas," there was "no melanoma," though she'll have to be diligent about checks every three months moving forward.
_
In January 2022, Chris Evert revealed her stage 1C ovarian cancer diagnosis. She told ESPN that in December 2021, she underwent a preventative hysterectomy — her sister Jeanne died from ovarian cancer in 2020 and in the fall of 2021, Chris learned she too had a pathogenic BRCA1 gene variant that put her at increased risk of developing the disease. Doctors discovered that even though Chris's annual exams, ultrasounds and MRI with contrast were all negative, as was a test for the amount of cancer antigen 125 protein in her blood, she still had a malignant tumor in her fallopian tube, which was removed. Though the cancer did not spread, Chris moved forward with chemo. "I feel very lucky they caught it early and expect positive results from my chemo plan," she said. "I've lived a very charmed life. Now I have some challenges ahead of me. But I have comfort in knowing the chemotherapy is to ensure that cancer does not come back."
One year later in January 2023, Chris, who underwent six rounds of chemo, gave fans a health update in an essay she penned for ESPN.com and revealed more news. "Today, I'm cancer-free, and there's a 90% chance that the ovarian cancer will never come back," she shared, going on to thank her late sister. "My sister's journey saved my life. I hope by sharing mine, I just might save somebody else's." Chris further revealed that she had another potentially life-saving surgery because "BRCA mutations are associated with an up to 75% risk of developing breast cancer, and an increased risk of prostate and pancreatic cancer as well," she wrote. So on Dec. 1, 2022, "a year to the day after my hysterectomy, I had a double mastectomy," the tennis legend explained. "I held my breath while I waited for my pathology results. Luckily, the report came back clean and clear, and my risk of developing breast cancer has been reduced by more than 90%."
However, less than a year later in December 2023, Chris released a new statement to ESPN revealing, "My cancer is back." She explained, "While this is a diagnosis I never wanted to hear, I once again feel fortunate that it was caught early. Based on a PET CT scan, I underwent another robotic surgery this past week. Doctors found cancer cells in the same pelvic region. All cells were removed, and I have begun another round of chemotherapy." The tennis legend added, "I encourage everyone to know your family history and advocate for yourself. Early detection saves lives. Be thankful for your health this holiday season."
_
In December 2023, "The Big Bang Theory" actress and comedian Kate Micucci revealed that she was diagnosed with lung cancer at 43 despite never having smoked.
Following surgery to remove the cancer, Kate released a TikTok video of herself in her hospital gown sharing the news with fans: "Hey, everybody, this is not a TikTok, it's a Sick Tok," she said. "I'm in the hospital but it's because I had lung cancer surgery yesterday. They caught it really early."
Explained Kate, who played Lucy on the hit CBS sitcom, "It's really weird because I've never smoked a cigarette in my life, so, uh, you know, it was a surprise. But it happens, and so the greatest news is they caught it early, they got it out, I'm all good."
_
Anna "Chickadee" Cardwell — the sister of "Here Comes Honey Boo Boo" star Alana Thompson and the daughter of "Mama June" Shannon — died at 29 on Dec. 9, 2023, less than a year after learning she had a rare cancer. "With the breaking heart, we are announcing that @annamarie35 is no longer with us. She passed away in my home last night peacefully at 11:12 PM," June wrote on Instagram on Dec. 10. "She gave one hell of a fight for 10 months she passed away with her family around her like she [wanted]."
Anna, a mother of two, was diagnosed with stage 4 adrenal carcinoma at 28 in January 2023, TMZ reported in March. A family source told the webloid that Anna was experiencing stomach aches, which led doctors to do testing that discovered the cancer in her liver, kidney and lung. According to TMZ, Anna underwent her initial round of chemotherapy in February. Reports also indicated that the mother of two quit her job as a car saleswoman in order to focus on her health battle.
In May 2023, Anna took to Instagram to share a hope-filled update after visiting Cracker Barrell for a meal. "Well going on to round 3 of chemo. … yesterday it was [a] pretty good day … and Cracker Barrel was good going down but not up," she joked of the nausea that comes with the cancer treatment." But over all it's going good and chemo is working we come to find, so things are looking good."
However, in July 2023, her mother, "Mama June" Shannon, told "Entertainment Tonight" that the family had learned Anna's cancer "is terminal … She's stage 4. She's not gonna go into remission. We've all accepted that, so I just tell people 'one day at a time' 'cause you never know." However, June admitted, "we don't know what the life expectancy is" for such a rare cancer (according to June, only one in 1 million have it). After finishing four rounds of chemo by the summer of 2023, Anna's next options included immune therapy or clinical trials. Yet despite the latest news and side effects like hair loss, Anna, June said, "is actually doing pretty good." Added her sister, Lauryn "Pumpkin" Efird, "She can still go to the grocery store, she can drive herself, she's still able to take [her] kids to and from places."
_
Bridgette Wilson-Sampras — the former Miss Teen USA-turned-actress who stepped away from Hollywood after marrying tennis star Pete Sampras — was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2022.
Pete shared the news about his wife of more than two decades in a statement released by the ATP Tour on Oct. 29, 2023.
"As most have come to know, I am a pretty quiet and private person. However, this past year has been an exceptionally challenging time for my family, and I have decided to share what's been going on," Pete explained. "Last December, my wife, Bridgette, was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Since then, she has had major surgery, pushed through chemotherapy and continues with targeted maintenance therapy."
Pete admitted it's "hard to watch someone you love go through a challenge like this." However, he added, "seeing our boys [Christian and Ryan] step up and be such strong supporters of Bridgette, myself and each other has been amazing." He also praised the "Billy Madison," "The Wedding Planner" and "I Know What You Did Last Summer" actress for how she's handled her health crisis. "Watching Bridgette continue to be an incredible mom and wife through it all has been inspiring," Pete wrote.
He ended his statement with a request for their fans: "I have also learned that it is very hard to reach for support when something is simply too hard to talk about," he explained. "With that said, I will end this by humbly asking for good thoughts and prayers for our family as Bridgette continues to thrive on her healing journey."
_
Radio personality Robin Quivers has been battling cancer since 2012.
The "Howard Stern Show" star opened up to People magazine in October 2023 about her long journey that began in 2012 when she felt unusually tired and had trouble urinating while at a friend's wedding. After a trip to the ER, she learned she had a grapefruit-sized mass in her pelvic area. Surgery soon followed after a series of inconclusive CT scans, MRIs and biopsies, and Robin underwent a complete hysterectomy and received the diagnoses: a rare form of stage 3C endometrial cancer.
For 15 months as she underwent radiation and chemotherapy, she leaned on friends including Howard, who "just surrounded me and made this network to take care of me. I never had to ask for anything. It was just overwhelming," she told People.
After being cancer-free for more than three years, she learned during a late 2016 routine scan that the disease had returned and metastasized to her lymph nodes. Doctors have been treating her ever since, but "it's never been a huge problem," according to Robin.
"When it's shown some growth, then we have to manage that," she said. She now undergoes intermittent immunotherapy infusions.
"I feel fine," she told People in October 2023. "It's been 11 years of dealing with this — and I'm still here."
_
On Oct. 16, 2023, Susan Sullivan shocked fans when she took to X to share a photo of herself in a hospital room standing alongside an IV pole while wearing a hospital gown. (See it next.) The following day, the Emmy-nominated actress returned to X to reveal that she'd been battling lung cancer.
"Thanks for all the lovely comments and concerns. I had lung cancer. The surgery was successful. The healing process is a struggle," she wrote.
Susan, who turned 80 in 2022, portrayed the mother of the titular crime novelist on the long-running procedural "Castle." She also spent years starring on "Dharma & Greg," "Falcon Crest" and "Another World." She scored an Emmy nomination in 1978 for her work on the short-lived medical drama "Having Babies."
_
"Life's surprising little turns try to be ready for them with humor and hope. On we go," Susan Sullivan captioned this photo of herself following successful surgery to treat her lung cancer.
_
"Three's Company" and "Step By Step" star Suzanne Somers lost her long battle with breast cancer on Oct. 15, 2023, passing away "peacefully" at home one day before her 77th birthday. "She survived an aggressive form of breast cancer for over 23 years," her publicist told People magazine in a statement shared on behalf of Suzanne's family. "Suzanne was surrounded by her loving husband Alan, her son Bruce, and her immediate family. Her family was gathered to celebrate her 77th birthday on October 16th. Instead, they will celebrate her extraordinary life, and want to thank her millions of fans and followers who loved her dearly." Suzanne's death certificate later confirmed her cause of death: "breast cancer with metastasis to the brain."
In July 2023, Suzanne confirmed that she'd recently battled breast cancer again. "I have been living with cancer since my 20s. And every time that little f***** pops up, I continue to bat it back. I do my best not to let this insidious disease control me," said told "Entertainment Tonight" in a statement. "It's a recurrence of my breast cancer. Like any cancer patient, when you get that dreaded, 'It's back,' you get a pit in your stomach. Then I put on my battle gear and go to war. This is [a] familiar battleground for me and I'm very tough."
The "Three's Company" star credited husband Alan Hamel and her children for supporting her amid her diagnoses. "My cancer is a disease that affected my whole family and once it hit me in my 20s, Alan and I got even closer and every moment of every day was precious. We have not spent even one day apart in over 42 years. That's the big upside of my cancer," she added. "My son refers to our relationship as functionally co-dependent. And my incredible family has been unbelievably supportive every step of the way."
The actress previously spoke about focusing on her health in the wake of her 2000 breast cancer diagnosis — prioritizing sleep, eating an all-organic diet and avoiding chemicals in food and beauty products. "My doctors said that if I didn't lead a chemical free life, supported by bio-identical hormones, I would not likely be here today," she added in her July 2023 statement. "I am so grateful to all my fans for all the loving wishes. That means so much to me. God Bless America."
Her July 2023 comments came after her husband initially shared the news with Page Six. "Suzanne has lived with cancer all her life," he said, referencing the breast cancer diagnosis the "Three's Company" star got in her 50s, the skin cancer she faced in her 30s and the hysterectomy she had years earlier. "In her 20s, she'd also dealt with two hyperplasia [in her uterus]… which is the waiting room for cancer," he added. Alan explained that at 76, Suzanne "has now dealt with her cancer once again," adding that "on June 6, she got an all-clear, but cancer is tricky and we will now closely monitor everything going forward. … We decided to put work on the back burner for now and focus on her health." Alan got two more months with Suzanne before she passed.
_
Sam Neill's cancer is in remission thanks to a rare anti-cancer drug for which he receives an infusion every two weeks. His doctors have warned him, however, that the drug will eventually stop working. The "Jurassic Park" actor told Australia Story that he is "prepared" to die and "not remotely afraid" of it.
"I know I've got [cancer], but I'm not really interested in it," he said. "It's out of my control. If you can't control it, don't get into it."
During an interview with The Guardian that debuted online on March 17, 2023, Sam revealed his stage 3 blood cancer diagnosis: He was diagnosed with angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma after he experienced swollen glands while promoting "Jurassic World Dominion" in the spring of 2022. He later underwent chemotherapy treatments and, while taking a break from acting, wrote a memoir detailing his life, career and cancer journey. "I never had any intention to write a book. But as I went on and kept writing, I realized it was actually sort of giving me a reason to live … so it was a lifesaver really, because I couldn't have gone through that with nothing to do," he said, adding that he's "just pleased to be alive" after his initial chemo plan proved unsuccessful.
_
Model and singer Carla Bruni — who was also the first lady of France when husband Nicolas Sarkozy was president of the country from 2007 to 2012 — was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2019 when she was in her early 50s, she revealed in October 2023.
She publicly shared the news in an Instagram video to mark Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
"I was diagnosed with breast cancer 4 years ago," her statement, which she shared in English and French, began. "Surgery, radiotherapy, hormone therapy, I went through the usual treatment for this type of cancer. But I was lucky: My cancer was not yet aggressive."
She continued to explain, writing, "Why wasn't it aggressive? Because it didn't have time to become aggressive… Every year, on the same date, I do a mammogram. If I hadn't done one every year, I wouldn't have a left breast today.
"I'm not writing this post to give you the details of my health. That's repugnant to me and I hesitated for a long time before talking about this," she explained, adding that "the reason I'm posting this today is to deliver a message. But a fundamental message for all the women who will read this: Do your mammograms every year. Do your mammograms. Your lives depend on it."
_
On a September 2023 episode of Soap Opera Digest's "Dishing with Digest" podcast, Kassie DePaiva opened up about the series of events that led to her 2016 diagnosis with acute myeloid leukemia — and her subsequent breast cancer diagnosis.
"I feel under my arm, I go, 'That's weird.' I felt two knots. So I thought, 'Hmmm.' And they weren't painful. I know I didn't feel bad, nothing," she recalled, adding that she "did a biopsy and, you know, the rest is history."
The following year, the "One Life to Live" and "Days of Our Lives" actress was diagnosed with breast cancer.
"I laugh and am like, 'Can you believe it?' But I had a lumpectomy and everything was clear, and so right now, as it stands, I'm cancer-free and happy," she said.
She went on to share her difficult experience with chemotherapy. "I was explaining how chemo is just so awful for your body and how it's not day to day, it's minute to minute," she said, as reported by People magazine. "You think, 'OK, I'm gonna be good,' and then you get up and all of a sudden your body eliminates… Are you faint or are you gonna throw up?"
Continued the soap star, "It's just yucky and you just think, 'This is never gonna end,' and then it does and then you go, 'Did I go through with that?' I cannot believe it, and that's kind of where I am now with, like, 'I can't believe the journey,' but I'm grateful."
_
Duran Duran guitarist Andy Taylor (pictured in 1984) was unable to attend his band's Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in November 2022 due to his cancer battle. "Just over 4 years ago I was diagnosed with stage 4 metastatic prostate cancer," the rocker, who was also a member of Power Station, wrote in a letter posted on Duran Duran's website and also read in part by his bandmates during their induction. "I have the Rodgers and Edwards of doctors and medical treatment that until very recently allowed me to just rock on. Although my current condition is not immediately life threatening there is no cure. Recently I was doing okay after some very sophisticated life extending treatment, that was until a week or so ago when I suffered a setback, and despite the exceptional efforts of my team, I had to be honest in that both physically and mentally, I would be pushing my boundaries."
In February 2023, Andy shared more details about his journey. The first indication that something was off came when he felt an "arthritic" pain while jogging. He then found a pair of lumps in his lymph nodes. "The first thing I thought of was, when was the last time I had a PSA [prostate-specific antigen] test?" Andy told People magazine, adding, "My father passed away because of prostate [cancer]. So there was the family history." He was diagnosed at stage 4 in October 2018. Though the drug abiraterone acetate helped him keep his cancer in what People described as a dead state, Andy said he's still had to make peace with the inevitable. "It's a death sentence. So you sort of walk out of the hospital in a stunned silence, because you could never be prepared for … you've got to start from the fact that it's a slow burn, so it's not going to take you quickly." Andy is still making music, which he says has been a boon for his health: "[I'm] trying to stay alive and live a life, which I am absolutely not giving up on."
Keep reading to learn how he's doing now…
_
In August 2023, Duran Duran guitarist Andy Taylor — seen here the same month — shared three more updates after returning to his native Britain, where he's receiving a new treatment, from his home on the Spanish island of Ibiza.
He revealed on the "BBC Breakfast" show that after he went public with his diagnosis, scientist Christopher Evans (whom Andy calls the "Elon Musk of cancer") reached out to him to offer an innovative drug treatment — "a nuclear medicine, Lutetium-177, which is targeted so it only sees cancer cells," the rocker explained. "It can't see healthy cells. It kills stage 4 cancer in your bones. And so what it's effectively done is extend my life for five years."
Later the same month — with five of six treatments left to go at the time — Andy marveled to The London Times, "I was classified as palliative, end-of-life care. And now I'm not; I'm asymptomatic."
In September 2023, Andy marveled on an episode of Britain's "Lorraine" talk show, "I'm doing great. I've had two rounds of treatment [now and] I'm like from the walking dead to … singing and dancing," he said, adding, "When I was diagnosed five years ago … there was only a few years to live and I had to live with that and so did my family."
_
Back in 2017, former E! host Maria Menounos was treated for a benign brain tumor. Then in January 2023 — not long after learning she and her husband were finally expecting a baby via surrogate after a decade-long fertility journey — she faced another shocking diagnosis: pancreatic cancer.
Her path to the discovery began in 2022 as she faced a different health issue, Maria told People magazine in a May 2023 interview. She began suffering from severe leg cramps in June 2022 and soon learned she had type 1 diabetes, which runs in her family. She adopted a strict diet and began taking insulin and monitoring her glucose levels and things improved quickly. By October 2022, "I felt so good. What else could go wrong?" she said. But a month later, she headed to the hospital "with excruciating abdominal pain coupled with diarrhea."
A CT scan and testing showed nothing wrong — but her pain continued to the point that it felt "like someone was tearing my insides out," Maria said. She then underwent a whole-body MRI with a company called Prenuvo, which revealed she had a 3.9 cm mass on her pancreas that a biopsy confirmed was stage 2 pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor. "I'm like 'How in the freaking world can I have a brain tumor and pancreatic cancer?'" All I could think was that I have a baby coming," she shared.
In February 2023, Maria underwent surgery to remove the tumor, part of her pancreas, her spleen, a fibroid and 17 lymph nodes. She's now in remission and has not required chemotherapy or additional treatment; instead, she'll have annual scans for the next five years. "I'm so grateful and so lucky," Maria said.
Keep reading for new details Maria shared about her cancer in July 2023…
_
In July 2023, Maria Menounos shared new details about her pancreatic cancer diagnosis. During an appearance on the "Not Skinny But Not Fat" podcast, as reported by Page Six, she revealed that a radiologist missed her tumor the first time she was scanned — and by the time doctors spotted it two months later when she underwent a full-body MRI, it had doubled in size. "When they found the tumor in the MRI [in January 2023], they said, 'Can we go back and get the records and look at the November [2022] scan? I bet it was there,'" she explained. "And it was. At that point it was 2 centimeters and by the time they had found it was almost 4 centimeters — it had doubled in size in two months."
She's since learned, she said, that "different scans have the ability to see different things better. For this, an MRI was what's really going to see it, for other things CT scans are better, for others things an ultrasound's better. It's a really complicated process…" After the tumor was confirmed, "the radiologist went back and he was able to see it and do an addendum and say, 'Yes, now with the knowledge it was there, we're able to see it is there.'"
Maria also shared more about her symptoms prior to her diagnosis. "I had severe diarrhea for a month and a half. I did all the stool tests, they came back negative, nothing was bad. I went and got a CT scan, they said, 'You're fine,'" she explained. "But my pain kept persisting, and any time I complained about the pain, my doctor was like, 'We've done all the tests.'"
_
Supermodel Linda Evangelista has faced breast cancer twice in five years. The supermodel made the revelation in an interview with WSJ. Magazine that debuted in September 2023.
Her first diagnosis came in 2018 when a tumor "was detected in my annual mammogram," she said. "The margins were not good, and due to other health factors, without hesitation, because I wanted to put everything behind me and not to have to deal with this, I opted for a bilateral mastectomy. Thinking I was good and set for life. Breast cancer was not going to kill me."
But four years later in 2022, she felt a lump on her breast and learned the cancer had returned. This time, Linda told her doctor to "'Dig a hole in my chest,'" she recalled. "I don't want it to look pretty. I want you to excavate. I want to see a hole in my chest when you're done. Do you understand me? I'm not dying from this."
Linda explained that she "just went into this mode that I know how to do — just do what you've got to do and get through it. And that's what I did."
Her oncologist has since told her that her prognosis now is "good." That led Linda to ask, "Why isn't it great?" She learned she had a "horrible oncotype score," which reflects the likelihood her cancer will return.
"I know I have one foot in the grave, but I'm totally in celebration mode. I've come through some horrible health issues," she said, referencing an allegedly botched 2015 CoolSculpting cosmetic procedure she's said left her "deformed" — they settled in 2022 — but now "I'm at a place where I'm so happy celebrating my book ['Linda Evangelista Photographed by Steven Meisel'], my life. I'm so happy to be alive. Anything that comes now is bonus."
_
Dolph Lundgren has been quietly battling cancer since 2015, he revealed in May 2023. The "Rocky" star said on the "In Depth With Graham Bensinger" series that doctors found a cancerous tumor in his kidney that was removed in 2015. The cancer soon went into remission for five years but in 2020, more tumors were discovered. He was given a terminal cancer diagnosis and told he only had a couple years to live. With tumors in his lungs, stomach, spine and kidneys, Dolph felt his days were numbered — some of the tumors were so large that surgery wasn't an option. "I thought it was it, for sure," he said. But after seeking a second opinion, Dolph found hope: He was put on a new medication that targeted his mutation and his tumors began shrinking, some as much as 90%. He now plans to undergo surgery to have them removed. "Hopefully when they take these out, there's no cancer activity and the medication that I'm taking is going suppress everything else," he said. "You appreciate life a lot more. I appreciate every day."
_
Just weeks after discovering from an at-home genetic test that she was positive for a BRCA2 gene mutation, which is linked to a significantly higher possibility of developing breast or ovarian cancer, "Today" show contributor Jill Martin learned in June 2023 that — despite having a clear mammogram less than six months earlier — she had already developed stage 2 breast cancer. "That test saved my life," Jill said on "Today."
In July 2023, she underwent a double mastectomy. During the four-hour surgery, her surgeon removed an "aggressive tumor" and 18 lymph nodes, "one of which was cancerous," Jill shared on Today.com, adding, "I will most likely need chemotherapy because of the aggressiveness of the [breast cancer] tumor."
In the fall of 2023, Jill will also have a preventative hysterectomy "as my chances of getting ovarian cancer are now 20% higher, according to my doctors." Wrote the journalist on Today.com, "That is not a percentage I am willing to live with." She also noted that her grandmother died from breast cancer and her mother "had a double mastectomy in her late 40s after being diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ, often referred to as stage 0 breast cancer." Jill's father was also tested and learned that he, like her, is BRCA2 positive, so he will now "get screened and stay vigilant about breast, prostate and pancreatic cancer, which he now knows he's at a higher risk for," she added. Jill shared that she "will also need to take anti-hormonal drugs for 5 years."
_
In October 2020, Jeff Bridges took to social media to reveal he had non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a cancer of the lymphatic system. "As the Dude would say.. New S*** has come to light," wrote the actor, referencing his "The Big Lebowski" character. "I have been diagnosed with Lymphoma. Although it is a serious disease, I feel fortunate that I have a great team of doctors and the prognosis is good. I'm starting treatment and will keep you posted on my recovery…"
In 2021, he opened up to People magazine about how he first discovered something was wrong, revealing he felt something unusual in his stomach while he was exercising at home one morning. He soon learned "it was a 12-by-9-inch tumor in my body. Like a child in my body. It didn't hurt or anything," he explained. He began chemotherapy by infusion followed by oral chemo and it was working, but in January 2021, his health suffered greatly when, defenseless with his immune system decimated by the chemo, he became extremely sick with COVID before vaccines were available. He spent nearly five month in the hospital where "I was pretty close to dying," he revealed.
His recovery was arduous and slow once he returned home, but oxygen and physical therapy helped him slowly but surely improve. In May 2023, Jeff shared a cancer update with AARP, revealing that his tumor has shrunk "to the size of a marble," he said.
_
Soap opera actor Eric Braeden — who's played Victor Newman on the CBS soap opera "The Young & the Restless" for more than four decades — shared with fans in April 2023 that he's been diagnosed with prostate cancer. In an emotional Facebook Live video, the Daytime Emmy winner explained that he got the diagnosis after experiencing prostate issues while he was recovering from knee-replacement surgery a few months earlier. "I hate to be this personal, but I think this may be good for some older guys who may or may not listen to this," he said, going on to explain that when he sought help for his issues, high-grade cancer cells were discovered near his bladder. His doctor then performed surgery to remove the cancer and perform a UroLift procedure to address some of his symptoms. Eric then began a six-week immunotherapy treatment plan.
"I will lick this. This b****** ain't going to get me, I'm going to get it. I'll be in top form again soon," the veteran daytime drama actor vowed. "Whenever you have someone in the family who goes through this, support them. It can work out. Nowadays, there is so much advancement in cancer treatment, you can survive it."
_
Hugely popular WWE wrestler Alexa Bliss (real name: Alexis Kaufman) announced on social media that she was recently diagnosed with skin cancer. "Dear younger me, you should have stayed out of tanning beds," Alexa, who married Ryan Cabrera in 2022, captioned a photo of herself with a bandage on her face. "There was a spot on my face … that had gotten worse. So went to get biopsy. Was basal cell carcinoma," she tweeted on March 22, 2023. "During my procedure, doc also found other squamous cells. Was a quick and easy procedure. Glad I always get my skin checked." Fans began to worry about Alexis when she took a break from the WWE earlier this year. "Tired of seeing these tweets. I am not on a hiatus. They know where to find me," she tweeted on March 10.
_
Mike Ness, the lead singer of celebrated punk rock band Social Distortion, has tonsil cancer. The punk icon announced on Instagram on June 7, 2023, that the band would be postponing its tour and album release due to his health. "In the midst of pre-production, I was diagnosed with stage one tonsil cancer. I was feeling well enough to continue with recording in the studio up until the very day before surgery," he wrote. "The recovery from surgery is a day-by-day process and in three weeks we start radiation and that should be the last therapy I need. The team of doctors are certain that once finished with this course, I will be able to start the healing and recovery process." Mike believes he'll make a "full recovery." "I want you all to know that this has opened my eyes to a whole new struggle. I know it's one that many of you or your loved ones have personally endured, and my heart goes out to you-because I now know what it's like from this heavy experience," he continued before defiantly adding, "We WILL get through this…."
_
"Tiger King" star Joe Exotic (real name: Joseph Maldonado Passage) shared a note on Instagram in November 2021, revealing that he's battling "aggressive" prostate cancer. "Everyone, it is with a sad face that I have to tell you the doctors called me in today to break the news that my prostate biopsy came back with an aggressive cancer," the controversial Netflix star, who's currently serving prison time for his role in a murder-for-hire plot against Big Cat Rescue founder Carole Baskin, explained on social media.
In February 2023, TMZ reported that while behind bars, Joe met with a urology specialist who believes his prostate cancer has spread to his bladder. Though Joe needs to undergo more testing, he no longer wants to seek treatment, writing in a document seen by the webloid, "I want to stay here and just let it take its course."
_
In November 2021, actress Blythe Danner revealed in an interview with People magazine that she's in remission after being diagnosed with the same oral cancer that killed her husband, director Bruce Paltrow, in 2002. In 2018, the Emmy winner "started feeling very woozy and I was forgetting everything," she told the magazine, "and then I felt a lump in my neck, right next to where Bruce had found his [in 1999]." After learning she had adenoid cystic carcinoma — a fairly rare form of oral cancer that often develops in the salivary glands — she quietly started treatment that ultimately included three surgeries, chemotherapy and radiation as well as alternative therapies. "I kept it from my kids for a long time," she admitted, referring to actress Gwyneth Paltrow and director Jake Paltrow, explaining, "I wanted to forge ahead as a mother, and I didn't want them to worry." Blythe also acknowledged that "Everyone is touched by cancer in some way, but it's unusual for a couple to have the same cancer." When she learned what she was facing, "I remember I looked up at heaven and said to Bruce, 'Are you lonely up there?'" she recalled. "It's a sneaky disease. But I'm fine and dandy now. And I'm lucky to be alive."
_
On Sept. 2, 2022, Jane Fonda revealed that at 84, she was battling cancer. "I've been diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma and have started chemo treatments," the Oscar winner wrote on Instagram in a lengthy post, adding that they were expected to continue for six months. "This is a very treatable cancer. 80% of people survive, so I feel very lucky. I'm also lucky because I have health insurance and access to the best doctors and treatments. I realize, and it's painful, that I am privileged in this," she continued. "Almost every family in America has had to deal with cancer at one time or another and far too many don't have access to the quality health care I am receiving and this is not right. We also need to be talking much more not just about cures but about causes so we can eliminate them. For example, people need to know that fossil fuels cause cancer. So do pesticides, many of which are fossil fuel-based, like mine." Jane said she is "handling the treatments quite well" and reassured her fans — and critics — that she "will not let any of this interfere with my climate activism." Three months later — six days before her 85th birthday — Jane shared a wonderful update in a blog post titled "BEST BIRTHDAY PRESENT EVER!!!" writing, "Last week I was told by my oncologist that my cancer is in remission and I can discontinue chemo. I am feeling so blessed, so fortunate. I thank all of you who prayed and sent good thoughts my way. I am confident that it played a role in the good news." She added, "I'm especially happy because while my first 4 chemo treatments were rather easy for me, only a few days of being tired, the last chemo session was rough and lasted 2 weeks making it hard to accomplish much of anything. The effects wore off just as I went to D.C. for the first live, in-person Fire Drill Fridays rally," referring to the demonstration and protest in aimed at fighting the climate crisis.
_
Tennis legend Martina Navratilova has been diagnosed with throat and — for the second time — breast cancer at 66, she announced on Jan. 2, 2023. "This double whammy is serious but still fixable," she said in a statement shared on the Women's Tennis Association website. "I'm hoping for a favorable outcome. It's going to stink for a while, but I'll fight with all have I got." The 59-time singles and doubles Grand Slam title winner previously beat breast cancer following a 2010 diagnosis when she was 53. She learned of her most recent diagnoses in late 2022: After discovering an enlarged lymph node in her neck during the WTA Finals in November 2022, a biopsy confirmed stage 1 throat cancer. According to the WTA post, it's caused by human papillomavirus (HPV). While undergoing that testing, doctors also discovered unrelated early stage breast cancer. Reports indicate Martina will begin treatment in January 2023.
_
Football Hall of Famer Terry Bradshaw announced on Oct. 2, 2022, that he twice battled cancer over the previous year. The former Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback-turned-sports analyst told viewers on FOX's NFL Sunday pregame show that he underwent surgery and treatment at Yale University Medical Center in Connecticut after being diagnosed with bladder cancer in November 2021. Then in March 2022, after getting an MRI for a "bad neck," doctors discovered a Merkel cell tumor — a rare form of skin cancer — in his "left neck." He had surgery to remove it at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Texas. "Folks, I may not look like my old self, but I feel like my old self. I'm cancer free, I'm feeling great, and over time I'm going to be back to where I normally am," Terry said on the air.
_
On Sept. 28, 2022 — in an essay titled "Why NOT Me?" — famed television journalist Katie Couric revealed that she was diagnosed with breast cancer three months earlier and has since undergone surgery and radiation treatments, sharing very personal details of her health journey. She explained that she was six months late getting her annual mammogram amid the coronavirus pandemic. "I shudder to think what might have happened if I had put it off longer," she wrote. She underwent a lumpectomy on July 14, during which her surgeon found the tumor was bigger than expected — 2.5 centimeters — and started radiation on Sept. 7, completing it a few weeks later. Katie, who famously underwent a colonoscopy on the "Today" show 22 years earlier after her first husband died from colon cancer, explained that she's sharing her own cancer story because "it seemed odd to not use this as another teachable moment that could save someone's life."
_
In his book "Breaking History: A White House Memoir," which was released in August 2022, former President Donald Trump's son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner reveals he was diagnosed with and treated for thyroid cancer at 38 during his tenure in the White House. "On the morning that I traveled to Texas to attend the opening of a Louis Vuitton factory [in October 2019], White House physician Sean Conley pulled me into the medical cabin on Air Force One. 'Your test results came back from Walter Reed [National Military Medical Center],' he said. 'It looks like you have cancer. We need to schedule a surgery right away,'" wrote Jared, who's married to Ivanka Trump, as reported in an excerpt shared with The New York Times. Jared, who wanted the news kept quiet and only told a small circle of people, also consulted a doctor at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. An operation to remove "an unusual growth in my thyroid" was scheduled for the Friday before Thanksgiving in 2019. Jared shared that when he thought about his diagnosis, "I reminded myself that it was in the hands of God and the doctors, and that whatever happened was out of my control," he wrote. He said the cancer was caught early yet still required removing a "substantial part of my thyroid" and that he was warned there could be lingering damage to his voice.
_
Olivia Newton-John was diagnosed with breast cancer for the first time in 1992. More than 20 years later in 2013, the "Grease" actress learned it had returned — this time in her shoulder. In 2017, the cancer came back a third time, surfacing in the base of her spine. "The pain level was really the hardest thing. I was trying to do shows and it was pretty agonizing. I can walk, but I can't go long distances," she told Australia's "60 Minutes." The Australian singer-actress underwent herbal and photon radiation therapies in addition to using cannabis oil to help her deal with her pain as she continued to fight the disease for many more years. On Aug. 8, 2022, Olivia lost her battle at 73. "Dame Olivia Newton-John (73) passed away peacefully at her Ranch in Southern California this morning, surrounded by family and friends," her husband, John Easterling, announced on Facebook, adding, "Olivia has been a symbol of triumphs and hope for over 30 years sharing her journey with breast cancer. Her healing inspiration and pioneering experience with plant medicine continues with the Olivia Newton-John Foundation Fund, dedicated to researching plant medicine and cancer."
_
On May 5, 2022, former child actor Tony Dow — who starred as Wally Cleaver on "Leave It to Beaver" and its spinoffs — and his wife, Lauren Shulkind, revealed to TMZ that the actor and artist been diagnosed with cancer. Less than three months later on July 27, 2022, Tony passed away at 77 from what TMZ reported was liver cancer.
_
During a March 2022 appearance on the "Today" show, Benjamin Bratt revealed that his wife, former Bond girl Talisa Soto, was diagnosed with breast cancer during the coronavirus pandemic. "This is something I typically would keep close-held, but through the pandemic, through self-exam and then by going to her yearly mammogram, she discovered that she was positive for breast cancer," he said of Talisa, who portrayed Lupe Lamora in 1989's 007 movie "Licence to Kill." Benjamin and Talisa decided to publicly share her diagnosis to encourage women to get annual screenings. The actress, Benjamin said, is now "doing great," adding, "The medication rocks the hormonal system a little bit but the good news is she was found to be cancer-free at this point. So we're just on guard to make sure it doesn't come back."
_
On Jan. 18, 2022, award-winning actor Louie Anderson's rep confirmed to TMZ that the Emmy-winning "Baskets" actor was getting treatment at a Las Vegas hospital for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, an aggressive form of cancer that is the most common type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. It's unclear when Louie was diagnosed.
_
In August 2021, comedian Kathy Griffin took to Instagram to share her surprising diagnosis with fans. "I've got to tell you guys something. I'm about to go into surgery to have half of my left lung removed. Yes, I have lung cancer even though I've never smoked!" the "Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List" star began her message. "The doctors are very optimistic as it is stage one and contained to my left lung. Hopefully no chemo or radiation after this and I should have normal function with my breathing. I should be up and running around as usual in a month or less." Kathy added, "Of course I am fully vaccinated for COVID. The consequences for being unvaccinated would have been even more serious. Please stay up to date on your medical check ups. It'll save your life." Three months later during a late-November appearance on "Jimmy Kimmel Live," she shared a big health update: The surgery was a success. "I'm cancer free!" Kathy revealed.
_
In her memoir "God Bless This Mess," which debuted in November 2021, Hannah Brown revealed that she underwent surgery for pancreatic cancer when she was just 11. The former "The Bachelorette" star recalled having painful stomach aches in fifth grade. Eventually, an MRI showed "a tumor the size of an egg" on her pancreas. "The tumor was malignant. Cancer. Pancreatic cancer — one of the deadliest forms of cancer there is," she writes. Thankfully the cancer had not spread. "There was a chance we'd have to go through radiation and chemotherapy, they said, depending on what the surgeon found once they got me into the operating room," she recalls. "But miraculously, I didn't need either one." Her bloodwork has been free of cancer cells ever since.
_
Vicki Gunvalson dropped a major bombshell on the Nov. 17, 2021, episode of Jeff Lewis's SiriusXM radio show: "I had cancer! I just had my whole f****** uterus taken out," she said. Surprisingly, neither Jeff nor his other guest, Vicki's fellow "The Real Housewives of Orange County" alum Tamra Judge, acknowledged her comment or asked any followup questions. Five days later, though, Vicki went into more detail, explaining to Celebuzz, "I was diagnosed with uterine cancer almost two years ago. … Due to the diagnosis, I had to undergo a non-elective full hysterectomy. I was fortunate to catch it early thanks to always adhering to my annual exam schedule." Vicki initially wanted to keep the news to herself, she said. "I also wasn't looking for sympathy by revealing this, but most importantly I encourage women to get their annual pap smears, as I had no symptoms whatsoever. If I didn't, most likely it would have been much more serious," she explained. "I want to move forward and not have to address this again. I realize how fortunate I am because it was caught before it spread, and that the procedure was extremely successful."
_
In July 2021, actress Miranda McKeon — who's best known as Josie Pye on the Netflix series "Anne With an E" — revealed that at 19, she was diagnosed with stage 3 breast cancer, which means it had spread to her lymph nodes. Her journey began when she "brushed across a lump that I hadn't felt before" while preparing to spend a weekend at the beach with friends after a year of pandemic college classes at the University of Southern California, where she's studying communications. "I didn't think anything could be wrong because of my age," she told People magazine, but she called her doctor anyway. In June 2021, a biopsy came back positive — a diagnosis so rare for a teenager that Miranda learned her case is "one in a million." The same month, she began eight weeks of intensive chemotherapy and in November 2021, she revealed she was preparing for a double mastectomy that will, she wrote on Instagram, "get rid of any cancer and significantly decrease my risk of reoccurrence in the future." On her doctor's advice, she also harvested and froze her eggs as "an insurance policy" because she hopes to be a mother someday and understands that chemo increases the risk of infertility. Despite the shock, heartache and challenges ahead, "I'm making it my job to find the beauty in all of this," Miranda told People, explaining that she's sharing her story on her blog and Instagram in hopes that "someone else will be able to read it down the line when they need it and they can find comfort and healing through it in the way that I do writing it." Miranda added, "I'm making it my job to try and pull something out of this."
_
In the September 2021 issue of Vera magazine, Stanley Tucci revealed that he was diagnosed with cancer three years earlier — doctors found a large tumor at the base of his tongue. "It was too big to operate, so they had to do high-dose radiation and chemo," he explained. "I'd vowed I'd never do anything like that, because my first wife [Kate] died of [breast] cancer [in 2009], and to watch her go through those treatments for years was horrible." The actor, who has children with Kate as well as two younger kids with second wife Felicity Blunt, said they "were great, but it was hard for them. I had a feeding tube for six months. I could barely make it to the twins' high school graduation." Reflecting on his experience, Stanley shared, "[Cancer] makes you more afraid and less afraid at the same time. I feel much older than I did before I was sick. But you still want to get ahead and get things done."
_
In 2015, former "Entertainment Tonight" host John Tesh was diagnosed with a rare form of prostate cancer — doctors told him he had 18 months to live. He struggled to cope and started mixing his prescribed painkillers with alcohol until wife Connie Sellecca stepped in and helped pull him out of a downward spiral and supported him as he sought treatment. John beat the odds and got through it, but in October 2020 in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, he learned his cancer had returned, the composer told People magazine a year later in October 2021. "I woke up with an enormous amount of pain one morning in October 2020 — I had pain in both my legs," John told the magazine. "It turned out there were two tumors around either side of my pelvis and wrapped around my organs." But this time, he explained, he was in a better headspace to fight. "I went back into the trenches — I was battle ready." He underwent multiple surgeries and chemotherapy treatments; the tumors left him with just one functioning kidney and he had to have his prostate removed, but a year later, he's cancer-free and feeling generally well, John told People.
_
In June 2021, blink-182 bassist-vocalist Mark Hoppus announced that he'd been diagnosed with cancer. "For the past three months I've been undergoing chemotherapy for cancer. I have cancer," he wrote on social media. "It sucks and I'm scared, and at the same time I'm blessed with incredible doctors and family and friends to get me through this. I still have months of treatment ahead of me but I'm trying to remain hopeful and positive," he added. "Can't wait to be cancer free and see you all at a concert in the hopefully near future. Love to you all." The rocker did not reveal his specific cancer diagnosis at the time but a month later during a YouTube Q&A with fans in Chile, as reported by USA Today, he shared that it's blood-related. "My classification is diffuse large B-cell lymphoma stage 4-A, which means, as I understand it, it's entered four different parts of my body," he shared, adding that his mother beat the "exact same form of cancer" years ago, as well as two bouts of breast cancer. "I've been able to talk with her and bond with her quite a bit [over it]," he said. After several rounds of chemo, in late September 2021, Mark took to social media to share a very happy update with fans: "Just saw my oncologist and I'm cancer free!!" he wrote. "Thank you God and universe and friends and family and everyone who sent kindness and love." Moving forward, he said he'll be scanned every six months.
_
James Michael Tyler — who's best known for playing snarky Central Perk coffee shop manager Gunther on "Friends" — on June 21, 2021, revealed he had cancer. "I was diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer [in 2018], which had spread to my bones," he explained on the "Today" show. "I've been dealing with that diagnosis for almost the past three years. … It's stage 4. Late-stage cancer. So eventually, you know, it's gonna probably get me." James passed away just four months later on Oct. 24, 2021. He was 56 when he learned he had the disease, which was discovered an an annual checkup and initially treated with hormone therapy, though it "mutate[d]" last year and spread to his bones and spine, he shared in June 2021, leading to paralysis in his lower body. James then began chemotherapy that "aggressively" fought the cancer, he explained, adding, "There are other options available to men if they catch it before me. Next time you go in for just a basic exam or your yearly checkup, please ask your doctor for a PSA [prostate-specific antigen] test. It's easily detectable. … If it spreads beyond the prostate to the bones, which is most prevalent in my form, it can be a lot more difficult to deal with."
_
On her June 14, 2021, show, CNN's chief international anchor, Christiane Amanpour, told viewers she has been diagnosed with ovarian cancer. "I've had successful major surgery to remove it, and I'm now undergoing several months of chemotherapy for the very best possible long-term prognosis, and I'm confident," she said. "I'm also fortunate to have health insurance through work and incredible doctors who are treating me in a country underpinned by, of course, the brilliant NHS," referring to Britain's National Health Service (she was broadcasting from London). The widely respected journalist continued, "I'm telling you this in the interest of transparency, but in truth really mostly as a shout-out to early diagnosis, to urge women to educate themselves on this disease; to get all the regular screenings and scans that you can; to always listen to your bodies; and of course to ensure that your legitimate medical concerns are not dismissed or diminished."
_
On Feb. 3, 2020, talk radio king Rush Limbaugh revealed to his listeners that he'd been diagnosed with "advanced lung cancer." The conservative political commentator went on to explain that he first realized something was wrong during his 69th birthday weekend in mid-January after he experienced shortness of breath. He said two medical institutions had since confirmed his diagnosis but that he was, "at the moment, experiencing zero symptoms." He shared that he planned to continue hosting his show as much as he could while undergoing treatment. "We've got a great bunch of doctors, a great team assembled, we're at full speed ahead on this," he said. Nine months later in October 2020, Rush revealed that his stage 4 cancer had progressed. "It's tough to realize that the days where I do not think I'm under a death sentence are over," he told his listeners. "We all know that we're going to die at some point, but when you have a terminal disease diagnosis that has a time frame to it, then that puts a different psychological and even physical awareness to it." Rush passed away on Feb. 17, 2021.
_
On Sept. 28, 2017, "Veep" star Julia Louis-Dreyfus announced on Twitter that she had breast cancer. "1 in 8 women get breast cancer. Today, I'm the one," she wrote. "The good news is that I have the most glorious group of supportive and caring family and friends, and fantastic insurance through my union. The bad news is that not all women are so lucky, so let's fight all cancers and make universal health care a reality." In early 2018, she gave fans an update on social media, writing, "Great doctors, great results, feeling happy and ready to rock after surgery."
_
"Today" show weatherman, journalist and co-host Al Roker told viewers on Nov. 6, 2020, that he's been diagnosed with prostate cancer. The NBC star said he was scheduled to have surgery to remove his prostate the following week. "It's a good news-bad news kind of thing," Al told viewers. "Good news is we caught it early. Not-great news is that it's a little aggressive, so I'm going to be taking some time off to take care of this." He added, "We'll just wait and see, and hopefully in about two weeks I'll be back [on 'Today']." Al indeed returned to the morning show a few weeks later.
_
On Jan. 11, 2021, a report from Germany's Bild revealed that Siegfried Fischbacher of "Siegfried & Roy" fame (left) was "terminally ill with pancreatic cancer." The report revealed that the 81-year-old had undergone a "12-hour operation" to remove a malignant tumor and had been "released from a clinic at his own request" so he could return to his Las Vegas home where he was being taken care of by "two hospice workers." Just two days later, the world-renowned entertainer died from the disease. The news emerged eight months after Siegfried's longtime entertainment partner, Roy Horn, died from complications of COVID-19.
_
In an essay for WebMD published in December 2020, basketball legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar revealed that in addition to two previously known health issues — he was diagnosed with leukemia, a cancer of the blood and bone marrow, in 2008 and in 2015 underwent quadruple coronary bypass surgery — he is also a prostate cancer survivor. The retired NBA star shared the news as part of a call to action to provide better health care to Black Americans. "I've been fortunate because my celebrity has brought me enough financial security to receive excellent medical attention. No one wants an NBA legend dying on their watch. Imagine the Yelp reviews," he joked in his essay. "But while I'm grateful for my advantages, I'm acutely aware that many others in the Black community do not have the same options and that it is my responsibility to join with those fighting to change that. Because Black lives are at risk. Serious risk." Read his essay in full here.
_
On Jan. 14, 2021, TMZ reported that "Saved By the Bell" alum Dustin Diamond had been diagnosed with cancer — and on Jan. 21, TMZ identified it as stage 4 small cell carcinoma, more commonly known as advanced lung cancer, which started somewhere else in his body and metastasized in his lungs. The diagnosis came after Dustin discovered a lump in his throat and experienced all-over body pain, which sent him to a Florida hospital for treatment. The actor famous for playing Screech immediately began chemotherapy, his rep told Entertainment Weekly. He died the morning of Feb. 1, 2021, TMZ reported.
_
In 2000, doctors removed about a third of Van Halen co-founder Eddie Van Halen's tongue following a tongue cancer diagnosis. In 2015, Eddie shared his theory with Billboard. "I used metal picks — they're brass and copper — which I always held in my mouth, in the exact place where I got the tongue cancer," he said. "Plus, I basically live in a recording studio that's filled with electromagnetic energy. So that's one theory. I mean, I was smoking and doing a lot of drugs and a lot of everything. But at the same time, my lungs are totally clear. This is just my own theory, but the doctors say it's possible." Then in October 2019, TMZ reported that the guitar legend was suffering from throat cancer and had quietly been flying between the United States and Germany for treatment. Son Wolf Van Halen later confirmed this, telling Howard Stern in a November 2020 interview, "At the end of 2017, he was diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer and the doctors were like, 'You have six weeks.' And then he went to Germany. Whatever the f*** they do over there, it's amazing because I got three more years with him." Eddie passed away at 65 on Oct. 6, 2020, following what his son described as a "long and arduous battle" with the disease.
_
The Wanted member Tom Parker revealed in October 2020 that he was battling an inoperable brain tumor. Six weeks earlier, the British "Glad You Came" singer was, at 32, diagnosed with a grade four glioblastoma — an aggressive type of cancer that grows in the brain or spinal cord — and though doctors told him it's terminal, he began radiotherapy and chemotherapy in an effort to shrink the tumor. "We are all absolutely devastated but we are gonna fight this all the way. We don't want your sadness, we just want love and positivity and together we will raise awareness of this terrible disease and look for all available treatment options," Tom and wife Kelsey, who at the time was pregnant with their second child, wrote on Instagram. Tom passed away in March 2022.
_
On March 6, 2019, Alex Trebek — who began hosting "Jeopardy!" in 1984 — announced in a video message that he had been diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer at 78. "Now, just like 50,000 other people in the United States each year, this week I was diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer," the game show icon explained. "Normally, the prognosis for this is not very encouraging, but I'm going to fight this, and I'm going to keep working," he added. "And with the love and support of my family and friends and with the help of your prayers also, I plan to beat the low survival rate statistics for this disease." Alex defied the odds for longer than most, celebrating when he learned in March 2020 that he was among only 18% of patients who make it to a year past their initial diagnosis. He celebrated again in July 2020 when he marked his 80th birthday and released a memoir. But on Nov. 8, 2020 — 20 months after he learned he had pancreatic cancer — he "passed away peacefully at home," the official "Jeopardy!" Twitter account announced, "surrounded by family and friends."
_
The world only learned that actress Kelly Preston had been diagnosed with breast cancer following her death at 57 on July 12, 2020. A family rep confirmed that the "Jerry Maguire" star had been fighting breast cancer for two years. "Choosing to keep her fight private, she had been undergoing medical treatment for some time, supported by her closest family and friends," the rep shared. Kelly's husband of 28 years, John Travolta, took to Instagram to thank Kelly's medical team. "My family and I will forever be grateful to her doctors and nurses at MD Anderson Cancer Center, all the medical centers that have helped, as well as her many friends and loved ones who have been by her side," he wrote.
_
Broadway and "Emily in Paris" actress Ashley Park was diagnosed with leukemia at 15. "Many times people bring up my cancer experience," the Tony- and Grammy-nominated star told Cosmopolitan. "I think it's very important to talk about, but I also appreciate when I'm not asked to talk about the experience, or about how it's informed how I've lived my life." She went on to explain, "I never wanted to be just the Asian girl, just the 'whatever' girl, and then I got to 16 and was the bald girl and the sick girl." During treatment, she always tried to focus on the future, not the "what ifs," she added. "I didn't want to know that I might be infertile or that my heart might stop working or any of that stuff because once you say it, you're thinking about it. Even though my body beat the disease, if I let it change anything, it's won."
_
Music star Rod Stewart was diagnosed with prostate cancer and beat the disease, he revealed at a Prostate Project charity event in Surrey, England, in September 2019. "Two years ago I was diagnosed with prostate cancer. No one knows this, but I thought this was about time I told everybody. I'm in the clear, now, simply because I caught it early," Rod told the crowd, according to Britain's Daily Mirror. He urged the men in the audience to get checked. "Guys, you've really got to go to the doctor. If you're positive, and you work through it and you keep a smile on your face… I've worked for two years and I've just been happy, and the good Lord looked after me." This was Rod's second bought with cancer: A doctor diagnosed him with thyroid cancer in May 2000. Two days after a biopsy determined that he'd developed the disease, the singer underwent surgery to remove the cancer from his thyroid gland.
_
On the Jan. 8, 2024, episode of "CNN News Central," CNN anchor Sara Sidner announced that she'd been diagnosed with stage 3 breast cancer at 51. She was on her second month of chemotherapy treatments at the time and will also undergo radiation and a double mastectomy.
"I have never been sick a day of my life. I don't smoke, I rarely drink. Breast cancer does not run in my family, and yet, here I am with stage 3 breast cancer. It is hard to say out loud," she told viewers, adding that she's grateful to cancer for "choosing me" because it made her shift her perspective on life. "I'm learning that no matter what hell we go through in life that I am still madly in love with this life, and just being alive feels really different for me now," she said.
Sara urged women of color to be diligent with breast exams and mammograms. "Stage 3 is not a death sentence anymore for the vast majority of women, but here is the reality that really shocked my system when I started to research more about breast cancer, something I never knew before this diagnosis: If you happen to be a Black woman, you are 41% more likely to die from breast cancer than your white counterparts," she shared. "To all my sisters, Black and white and brown out there, please, for the love of God, get your mammograms every single year. Do your self-exams. Try to catch it before I did."
_
On Oct. 1, 2019, Beyonce and Solange's dad, Mathew Knowles, revealed that he was diagnosed with breast cancer in the summer of 2019 at 67. He knew something was wrong when he noticed small spots of blood on his white T shirts. When he went to see his doctor, a mammogram and biopsy confirmed it: He had breast cancer. He underwent surgery in July and is now preparing to have his other breast removed in January 2019 in hopes of reducing his chances of another diagnosis, he told "Good Morning America." Mathew, who has a history of breast cancer in his family, also soon learned through genetic testing that he has a BRCA2 gene mutation, which means he has an increased risk of breast cancer, prostate cancer, pancreatic cancer and melanoma. "I want to continue the dialogue on awareness and early detection — male or female," he told "GMA." "The key to this is early detection."
_
In October 2016, Ben Stiller revealed that he'd been diagnosed with prostate cancer back in June 2014. The funnyman's doctor detected the cancer with a Prostate-Specific Antigen blood test during the actor's yearly physical. He underwent surgery to treat the disease.
_
On June 17, 2019, Megadeth rocker Dave Mustaine revealed he has throat cancer. "It's clearly something to be respected and faced head on – but I've faced obstacles before," the heavy metal legend wrote on Facebook. "I'm working closely with my doctors, and we've mapped out a treatment plan which they feel has a 90% success rate. Treatment has already begun." His treatment forced the band to scrap most of its 2019 concerts.
_
Robin Roberts has battled cancer twice: breast cancer in 2007 and myelodysplastic syndrome — a group of cancers involving the bone marrow — in 2012. She underwent chemotherapy, radiation treatments, bone marrow transplants, a lumpectomy and a partial mastectomy during her fights against the disease.
_
Tom Brokaw, a former "NBC Nightly News" anchor and current senior correspondent for NBC News, was diagnosed with the blood cancer multiple myeloma, which causes cancer cells to accumulate in the bone marrow, in 2013. Tom later told The New York Times that in an effort to put his disease — which is considered treatable but ultimately incurable — into remission, he'd undergone "three years of chemotherapy, a spinal operation that cost me three inches of height, monthly infusions of bone supplements, and drugs to prevent respiratory infection" among other treatments. But his battle left him with "excruciating" pain in his bones, so he's embraced an alternative approach to dealing with the agony. "I'm now on medical marijuana," Tom revealed in a video that made headlines after its release on March 26 on the cancer information site SurvivorNet.
_
"Dog the Bounty Hunter" star Beth Chapman revealed on Sept. 15, 2017, that she'd been diagnosed with stage II throat cancer. In a letter to friends, she wrote, "I've been dealt my share of unexpected blows over the course of my almost fifty years but nothing as serious as the one I heard from my doctors two weeks ago when they uttered those dreaded three words, 'You have cancer.'" The reality star that after "months of a nagging cough" she decided to see a doctor. That checkup resulted in a diagnosis of stage II throat cancer and a "T2 tumor" that was blocking her breathing. She initially beat it, but 14 months later in November 2018, doctors discovered Beth's cancer had returned. She started chemotherapy in January 2019, but the cancer spread to her lungs. Beth died on June 26, 2019, in Hawaii.
_
"Inside Edition" host Deborah Norville has a viewer to thank for putting her on the path that led to a cancer diagnosis. "We live in a world of see something, say something, and I'm really glad we do," Deborah said in a video posted on the show's YouTube account on April 1, 2019. "When you work on television, viewers comment on everything. Your hair, your makeup, the dress you're wearing. And a long time ago an 'Inside Edition' viewer reached out to say she'd seen something on my neck. It was a lump." Though doctors initially determined the lump was benign, the thyroid nodule eventually turned cancerous, Deborah explained. "For years, it was nothing. Until recently, it was something. The doctor says it's a very localized form of cancer, which tomorrow, I'll have surgery to have removed. There will be no chemo, I'm told no radiation."
_
Hugh Jackman has been treated for skin cancer several times since late 2013 — including in early 2016, when he had a basal cell carcinoma removed from his nose.
_
In January 2019, actor Sam Lloyd — who might be best known for his hilarious run as lawyer Ted on "Scrubs" (pictured) — learned he had cancer, and that it had spread. He initially chalked up a 10-pound weight loss to his busy schedule and the headaches he'd been having to lack of sleep since he and wife Vanessa had recently welcomed their first child together. But when Sam went to see a doctor, who ordered a CT scan thinking it was a sinus issue, he learned the truth: "The scan revealed a mass on Sam's brain. Within a day, he was in brain surgery. Unfortunately the tumor was too intertwined so the surgeons couldn't remove it," a GoFundMe page launched by a friend in February 2019 explained. Soon, "Sam and Vanessa were informed that the cancer in his brain had metastasized from his lungs. Further scans showed the cancer was also in his liver, spine, and jaw." Sam and his wife have remained "incredibly strong and positive" in the face of the news, notes the GoFundMe page author. "Humor and laughter, which have been a huge part of Sam's life, will undoubtedly help him with what lies ahead."
_
Cobie Smulders was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2008. The "Avengers" franchise and "How I Met Your Mother" star underwent multiple surgeries and used a wide variety of alternative medicine techniques to treat the disease.
_
In January 2019, country music singer John Berry revealed that he was battling throat cancer. He and his wife told fans they were staying strong as he underwent treatment. "You don't see fear on these faces," John's wife, Robin, said in a Facebook video. "We have a planned regimen and John is undergoing treatment for about five weeks. We've had to move a couple of tour dates around. All is going well. We are trusting God to get us through this time." According to John, the cancer is "highly treatable and has an incredible cure rate."
_
Christina Applegate had a double mastectomy after cancer was detected in one of her breasts in 2008. Though she initially had a lumpectomy, which doctors recommended she follow with radiation since the cancer had been detected early, she made the decision to have a bilateral mastectomy after learning she was positive for the BRCA1 gene, which greatly increases the chances of a breast cancer recurrence. "It just seemed like, 'I don't want to have to deal with this again. I don't want to keep putting that stuff in my body. I just want to be done with this.' And I was just going to let them go," she told Oprah Winfrey of her decision. In 2021, Christina revealed she was facing another difficult diagnosis: She has multiple sclerosis.
_
In April 2017, Val Kilmer finally confirmed what fans and friends had long suspected: He'd battled cancer. After previously denying that he was suffering from the disease, he revealed in a Reddit "Ask Me Anything" with fans on April 26 that he'd beat it. A fan asked, "A while ago, MichaelDouglas claimed you had terminal cancer. What was the story behind that?" Val replied, "He was probably trying to help me cause press probably asked where I was these days, and I did have a healing of cancer, but my tongue is still swollen altho healing all the time. Because I don't sound my normal self yet people think I may still be under the weather."
_
In an interview with "Extra" in 2017, Larry King revealed that he'd been diagnosed with lung cancer. "It wasn't really a battle. It was really strange," the legendary TV host said. "I have a checkup every year. I've gone through a lot in my life — I've had a heart attack and heart surgery. Part of my checkup is the chest X-ray, and that is the protocol. I do it every year… it was always normal. Then the doctor says, 'I see a little spot here. Let's do a CAT scan, so they do a CAT scan, and they say, 'Let's do a PET scan'… I don't think there are any other scans." Doctors, Larry said, knew they wanted to get rid of the spot, but didn't know if the spot was malignant or benign. In July 2017, he had it removed. "I had the surgery here at [Cedars Sinai Hospital]. They took it out. It was malignant," Larry said. "They were going to take it out if it was malignant or benign. They tested it. They said, 'You are fine.' It was stage 1." He passed away from sepsis in 2021 following a battle with COVID.
_
Robert De Niro was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2003.
_
Sheryl Crow underwent a lumpectomy and radiation after a mammogram detected her breast cancer in 2006.
_
Sharon Osbourne battled colon cancer in 2002. She had a foot of her colon removed and then underwent chemotherapy as part of her treatment. A decade later, Ozzy Osbourne's missus had a double mastectomy after she discovered that she was at risk for breast cancer.
_
In 2010, Michael Douglas underwent treatment for tongue cancer — but claimed at the time that he was battling throat cancer — after a doctor found a walnut-size tumor at the base of his tongue. The Oscar winner reportedly blamed his health on a more easily treatable form of cancer to avoid alarming the public. (Michael's doctor warned him that he risked losing part of his jaw and tongue in surgery to treat the disease.)
_
Erin Andrews secretly battled cervical cancer following a September 2016 diagnosis. She underwent surgery rather than radiation or chemotherapy.
_
In 2015, Rita Wilson underwent a double mastectomy and reconstructive surgery after she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
_
A doctor diagnosed Giuliana Rancic with early-stage breast cancer in the fall of 2011 while she was undergoing in vitro fertilization treatments. The hostess underwent a lumpectomy and radiation before making the decision to have a double mastectomy. She welcomed son Duke via surrogate the following year.
_
Cynthia Nixon was diagnosed with breast cancer in October 2006. Her mother, Anne, had also battled the disease.
_
Michelle Monaghan had a chunk of her calf removed after a doctor determined that a mole on the back of her leg was cancerous.
_
In 2003, Kathy Bates battled ovarian cancer. In 2012, she underwent a double mastectomy after doctors found a tumor during a scan.
_
In 2009, doctors diagnosed Maura Tierney with breast cancer. She underwent a skin-sparing mastectomy and three months of regular chemotherapy as part of her treatment.
_
Edie Falco battled breast cancer in 2003. She underwent chemotherapy to treat the disease.
_
Music star Eddie Money revealed in a clip from his reality show "Real Money" that was released on Aug. 24, 2019, that he'd been diagnosed with stage 4 esophageal cancer. "Am I gonna live a long time? Who knows, it's in God's hands," the "Two Tickets to Paradise" and "Take Me Home Tonight" performer said. "But you know what? I'll take every day I can get. Every day above ground is a good day." Eddie passed away less than a month later on Sept. 13.
_
In 2013, Camille Grammer underwent a hysterectomy after she was diagnosed with early stage endometrial cancer.