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Rita Wilson reveals she has cancer

The actress, who is expected to fully recover after a double mastectomy, shows value of a second opinion

- Ann Oldenburg and Maria Puente USA TODAY Contributi­ng: Liz Szabo

Rita Wilson is the next Angelina Jolie when it comes to celebritie­s with cancer and how to handle it. And she may save some lives, too.

Wilson, 58, revealed Tuesday to People that she has breast cancer and is taking leave from the Broadway play she stars in, Fish

in the Dark.

Wilson, who is married to Tom Hanks, said she had a bilateral mastectomy and reconstruc­tion after a diagnosis of invasive lobular carcinoma. “I am recovering and, most importantl­y, expected to make a full recovery,” she said in a statement.

Jolie, who has the breast-cancer gene, also announced it to the world when she had a double mastectomy two years ago. And last month she again went public in The New York Times about how she had her ovaries and fallopian tubes removed to help reduce her chances of developing hard-to-detect killer cancers.

Wilson could have kept her medical condition private but chose to reveal it to highlight the value of getting a second opinion.

The actress had been monitoring an underlying condition of lobular carcinoma in situ, in which abnormal cells develop in the milk glands, increasing the risk of cancer. She had had two biopsies, and something more unusual was discovered, but she was “relieved” to learn the pathology report showed no cancer.

Still, a friend urged her to get a second opinion. And her gut told her the same. “A different pathologis­t found invasive lobular carcinoma.” A third doctor confirmed the diagnosis.

“I share this to educate others that a second opinion is critical to your health,” Wilson said in her statement. “You have nothing to lose if both opinions match up for the good, and everything to gain if something that was missed is found, which does happen. Early diagnosis is key.”

As with Jolie, Wilson’s candor drew praise. “Rita Wilson has become the poster child for both second opinions and trusting your own instincts with regards to your body,” says Howard Bragman of FifteenMin­utes.com, a publicist who advises numerous celebrity clients.

“I think this is a wonderful use of being a popular media figure,” says Mitchell Gaynor, a professor at Weill Cornell Medical College. “It empowers patients by watching a person rationally deal with illness.”

Most women receiving positive news don’t need a second opinion, says Claudine Isaacs, oncology professor at Georgetown Lombardi Comprehens­ive Cancer Center in Washington. Yet when women are diagnosed with

an uncommon condition — Wilson’s biopsies found pleomorphi­c lobular carcinoma in situ, which may be more aggressive — getting a second opinion is “not unreasonab­le,” Isaacs says.

Pathologis­ts disagree more than many realize, particular­ly about precancero­us lesions, according to a study in March in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

Doctor were asked to examine sets of breast biopsies. While 96% agreed which samples were invasive cancer, only 87% agreed which samples were benign. Just 48% of doctors agreed which samples were “atypical” (not normal, but not yet cancerous).

If the first two doctors disagree, patients may find a third specialist to settle the matter, Isaacs says. But, she says, “if the second opinion was from a very reputable place, you may not need a third opinion.”

“Rita Wilson has become the poster child for both second opinions and trusting your own instincts with regards to your body.”

Celebrity publicist Howard Bragman

 ?? KEVIN MAZUR, WIREIMAGE ??
KEVIN MAZUR, WIREIMAGE
 ?? LARRY BUSACCA, GETTY IMAGES ?? Rita Wilson, with her husband, Tom Hanks, said in a statement that “I am recovering and ... expected to make a full recovery.”
LARRY BUSACCA, GETTY IMAGES Rita Wilson, with her husband, Tom Hanks, said in a statement that “I am recovering and ... expected to make a full recovery.”

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