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MYTH: Breast cancer won’t come back after a double mastectomy.

TRUTH: About 1 in 10 early-stage patients will develop metastatic disease, even if both breasts are removed.

JAMA Oncology, July 2024


I was first diagnosed with breast cancer after having two children, over 25 years ago. I had both breasts removed back then to prevent any breast cancer from coming back—or so we thought.

What we didn’t know was that one cell must have escaped that surgery and went unchecked in my body for the next 12 years, spreading quietly throughout all of my bones and even my brain. I found out in an emergency room that my early stage breast cancer was indeed back, and this time as deadly metastatic breast cancer.

I know now that my breast cancer is considered a postpartum breast cancer because it was diagnosed within 10 years following a childbirth. That meant it had a higher likelihood of spreading and becoming metastatic Stage IV terminal, incurable breast cancer.


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