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Like Kate, I had abdominal surgery, then had to tell my children I had cancer

The Princess of Wales’ announcement last week brought back vivid memories for Gaby Koppel, whose story has very close parallels...

March 25, 2024 17:35
Gaby after chemo pub 600ppi
Gaby after chemotherapy
4 min read

Watching Catherine Princess of Wales addressing the nation last Friday brought back a lot of difficult memories for me. Like Kate, I underwent abdominal surgery in my forties. Like her, very soon after I was diagnosed with cancer. And, like her, having to keep it secret also caused me a few problems – though in my case it didn’t result in the outbreak of myriad conspiracy theories or a media storm.

I was definitely never as poised as Kate appeared in the very moving video in which she broke her news. I’m sure having serried ranks of staff to support you does help, and being able to afford the best healthcare in the world must also be very comforting. But she still had to find the grace and composure to face the camera alone, while my devastating diagnosis left me walking round in a daze, even though it should have come as little surprise.

A year or two earlier I’d tested positive for a BRCA gene mutation, ten times more common in Ashkenazi Jews than the population at large. I was told it gave me an 80 per cent lifetime chance of contracting breast or ovarian cancer. Not fancying those odds, I’d had my ovaries removed. That was my abdominal surgery.

Then about a month later I found a lump in my right breast. Because of my genetic condition I was fast- tracked into a specialist unit. As the various examinations proceeded, the staff kept repeating, “It’s probably nothing”, thinking it would reassure me, which it didn’t. The biopsy seemed to be a bit of a challenge and by the time they’d dug around to get what they needed I was feeling quite bruised. It was the last business day before Christmas so there were decorations up, and the clinic was starting to empty for the holidays when they told me. Turns out it was actually something, after all.

Topics:

Cancer