List of breast cancer patients by survival status: Difference between revisions

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*[[Marianne Faithfull]], British singer and actress (see [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/5345326.stm]).
*[[Marianne Faithfull]], British singer and actress (see [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/5345326.stm]).
*[[Edie Falco]], American stage and TV actress (see [http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/08/05/1091557967607.html?from=storyrhs]).
*[[Edie Falco]], American stage and TV actress (see [http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/08/05/1091557967607.html?from=storyrhs]).
*[[Deanna Favre]], creator of [[Deanna Favre for Hope Foundation]] and wife of American football quarterback [[Brett Favre]] (see [http://www.usatoday.com/sports/football/nfl/packers/2005-10-19-deanna-favre-cover_x.htm], [http://www.favrefoundationgear.com/]).
*[[Deanna Favre]], founded [http://www.deannafavre4hope.com/ The Deanna Favre Hope Foundation] and wife of American football quarterback [[Brett Favre]] (see [http://www.usatoday.com/sports/football/nfl/packers/2005-10-19-deanna-favre-cover_x.htm], [http://www.favrefoundationgear.com/]).
*[[Caitlin Flanagan]], American magazine writer, editor and book author (see [http://feministlawprofs.law.sc.edu/?p=510]).
*[[Caitlin Flanagan]], American magazine writer, editor and book author (see [http://feministlawprofs.law.sc.edu/?p=510]).
*[[Peggy Fleming]], American Olympic champion figure skater (see [http://www.healingribbons.net/famous_survivors.htm]).
*[[Peggy Fleming]], American Olympic champion figure skater (see [http://www.healingribbons.net/famous_survivors.htm]).

Revision as of 01:17, 19 February 2008


Former U.S. First Lady Nancy Reagan is a long-term breast cancer survivor.

This list of notable breast cancer patients includes people who made significant contributions to their chosen field and who were diagnosed with breast cancer at some point in their lives, as confirmed by public information.

According to the United States National Cancer Institute, an estimated 212,920 new cases and 40,970 deaths (women only) will occur nationwide in 2006 (see [1]).

Alive

Died due to breast cancer

Died for other reasons

  • Bella Abzug, American lawyer, politician and women's movement leader; had been battling breast cancer for a number of years before developing heart disease, which claimed her life; however, it was never publicly disclosed if the cancer had become advanced or metastasized, or what stage it was; called for grassroots action to stop the environmental pollution fueling the cancer epidemic; refused to call herself a breast cancer survivor, saying "I'm a breast cancer fighter, and that's what we all must be if we are going to change things." (died at age 77; see [421]).
  • Barbara Bel Geddes, American actress; survived breast cancer in 1972, died from lung cancer in 2005; (died at age 83; see [422]).
  • Erma Bombeck, American columnist and author; survived breast cancer, but died during a kidney transplant (died at age 69; see [423]).
  • June Bronhill, Australian opera singer; survived breast cancer and died from Alzheimer's Disease (died at age 75; see [424]).
  • Fanny Burney, English novelist; survived breast cancer (died at age 88; [425]).
  • Julia Child, famous American TV cook, known as "The French Chef"; survived breast cancer and died of natural causes; (died at age 91; see [426]).
  • Nellie Connally, American wife of former Texas Governor John Connally; survived breast cancer and died of natural causes; (died at age 87; see [427], [428]).
  • Annalee Fadiman, author and World War II foreign correspondent for Life and Time magazines; committed suicide after a long battle with breast cancer and Parkinson's disease (died at age 85; see [429], [430]).
  • Greta Garbo, Swedish-American actress; apparently survived breast cancer following a double mastectomy; causes of death per one of her biographies were kidney and stomach failure and pneumonia; died in 1990 (died at age 84; see [431]).
  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman, American writer; suffering from inoperable breast cancer, died due to suicide by inhaling chloroform; (died at age 75; see [432]).
  • Paulette Goddard, American actress; apparently survived breast cancer, but died following a short battle with emphysema in Switzerland (died at age 79; see [433]).
  • Ruth Mosko Handler, American creator of Barbie and Nearly Me prosthetics; she survived breast cancer in the 1970s but died following colon cancer surgery (died at age 85; see [434]).
  • Kathy Keeton, South African-born and bred Penthouse publisher; wife of publisher/collector Bob Guccione; died from complications during surgery on an intestinal obstruction after having first treated herself, reasonably successfully, with hydrazine sulfate, and reduced the size and number of tumors (died at age 58; see [435]).
  • Betsy Lehman, a Boston Globe newspaper columnist, and Maureen Bateman, a teacher, both of whom had advanced breast cancer, but died of medication overdoses at Boston's Dana Farber Institute; The Betsy Lehman Center for Patient Safety and Medical Error Reduction created in aftermath of scandal. (Lehman died at age 39 and Bateman died at age 55; see [436], [437], [438]);
  • Myrna Loy, American actress, had a double mastectomy, but apparently survived breast cancer; died during surgery for undisclosed causes (died at age 88; see [439]).
  • Anna Moffo, Italian-American singer and operatic soprano who died from a stroke after grappling with complications of breast cancer for a decade (died at age 73; see [440]).
  • Alla Nazimova, Russian-born American stage and film actress who survived breast cancer but died due to a coronary thrombosis in 1945; (died at age 66; see [441]).
  • Minnie Pearl, born Sarah Ophelia Colley, American Grand Ole Opry star, country comic, singer & philanthropist who survived breast cancer but died in 1996 of complications from a stroke (died at age 83; see [442]).
  • Alma Reville, English-born American assistant film director, actress, and wife of film director Alfred Hitchcock; survived breast cancer; died of natural causes (died at age 82)
  • Mary Roberts Rinehart, American writer; apparently survived breast cancer and died from natural causes; (died at age 82; see [443]).
  • Susan Sontag, American author, initially diagnosed with advanced or metastatic breast cancer, but died of a form of leukemia traceable to the massive doses of radiotherapy and chemotherapy she had received decades earlier for her breast cancer; she was also diagnosed with a rare form of uterine cancer shortly before her death, which, however, did not appear to play any role in her demise (died at age 71; see [444]).
  • Henny van Andel-Schipper, Netherland's-born World's oldest person until her death in 2005; successfully treated for breast cancer at age 100 (died at age 115 of an unrelated gastric cancer; see [445]).
  • Mary Wickes, American actress; suffered from numerous ailments, including renal failure, massive gastrointestinal bleeding, severe hypotension, ischemic cardiomyopathy, anemia and breast cancer (stage of cancer unknown), which cumulatively resulted in her death (died at age 85; see [446]).

See also

References

  1. ^ Schenkar, Joan (2000). Truly Wilde: The Unsettling Story of Dolly Wilde, Oscar's Unusual Niece. New York: Basic Books. pp. 37–48. ISBN 0-465-08772-8. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)