Katie Couric Rita Wilson PHOTOS

Roy Rochlin/GettyAge at diagnosis: 65

Katie Couric revealed in a personal essay on Sept. 28, 2022, that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer.

The legendary journalist and author, whose first husband Jay Monahan died of colon cancer in 1998, spurring her to be an outspoken advocate and fundraiser for cancer research, shared her news in an effort to encourage her female followers to get their mammograms on time.

“Please get your annual mammogram,” wrote Couric. “I was six months late this time. I shudder to think what might have happened if I had put it off longer. But just as importantly, please find out if you need additional screening.”

October 2022 marks Couric’s first Breast Cancer Awareness Month since receiving her diagnosis. On the first day, she took to Instagram to “spread the word that screening saves lives.” The former TODAY Show co-anchor prompted her followers to post photos “with whoever or whatever inspires” them to prioritize their health.

To launch the social media movement, Couric shared a smiley shot of her and her daughters, Ellie and Caroline. “Here are two of my reasons,” she said in the caption.

Clea Shearer
Courtesy Clea ShearerAge at diagnosis: 40

Shearer had just released her first-ever magazine issue, announced the acquisition of her company and was about to start promotions for the second season of her hit Netflix series when everything came to a very sudden halt.

The professional organizer and star of Get Organized with the Home Edit was in New York City to film a segment for the Today show with her costar, best friend and business partner Joanna Teplin when she found two small lumps in her right breast during a self-exam. Within a few weeks, she learned she had stage 1 invasive mammary carcinoma, an aggressive form of breast cancer. She began treatment and in Sept. 2022 announced that she had finished her final round of chemo.

At the time of diagnosis, Shearer told PEOPLE, “I felt something, a mass, a lump. But I didn’t know what a lump actually even felt like, so I was just in my hotel room Googling, ‘What does a breast tumor feel like?’ ”

“I think I had convinced myself, because of my age and because I don’t have a history of breast cancer in my family, that it was something, but it would not be a cancerous tumor,” the married mom of two continued.

“[I want to] have people understand that if you feel anything amiss, you have to say something. You might not get a response from your doctor that you like. They might push it off and say you don’t need a test or we’ll get you in at your next physical. But we know our body’s best,” she said. “Self-examining is the best thing you can possibly do and it costs nothing. Self-examining is what saved me.”

Hilary Farr
HGTVAge at diagnosis: 70

In 2012, after Farr went in for a routine mammogram, doctors found a suspicious lump. She immediately underwent surgery, and lab results confirmed that the tumor was precancerous, not malignant. “I felt so much relief,” she told PEOPLE. “I moved on.”

But in late 2014, while Farr, then 70, was filming Love It or List It in Raleigh, North Carolina, a mammogram revealed a serious diagnosis: She had invasive breast cancer, a tumor that had spread into surrounding breast tissue. Farr underwent a second lumpectomy and after the procedure, “I was signed off by the medical oncologist saying, ‘You’re done. You’re fine. Off you go,’ ” Farr recalled.

Nearly two months later, a shocked Farr says she learned she was supposed to get radiation as a part of her course of treatment but was incorrectly told by the medical oncologist it was not necessary. “I was terrified, because I knew I had a very small window,” she said.

Her fear quickly turned to anger. “I felt absolute fury that someone could be so flippantly wrong,” she says. “I could have been dead.”

In March 2015 she then began a 28-day course of radiation, but seven months later, doctors found another suspicious breast growth. She underwent a third lumpectomy, and the tumor was considered precancerous. Farr is now in remission.

“Fear of breast cancer stops a lot of women from getting checked. But as terrifying as it is, you face it,” she said, adding that coping with an illness alone is a mistake she doesn’t want others to make.

“Thinking that you should keep it a secret or just power through doesn’t help and it doesn’t heal,” she added. “If I can change that for one person, then that’s enough.”

Robin Roberts
Robin Roberts. James Devaney/GC ImagesAge at diagnosis: 46

In 2007, Good Morning America co-anchor Roberts announced her breast cancer diagnosis on air, sharing that she did not want the show’s viewers to hear it from anyone else besides her. “My family here [at ABC] knows, and my family at home knows,” she said during the broadcast. “And I’m very, very blessed and thankful that I found it early.” Roberts detailed that she discovered a lump during a self-examination, and that she would undergo an initial surgery just days after the announcement.

The television journalist completed eight chemotherapy treatments in January 2008.

More than a decade later, in February 2022, Roberts’ longtime partner, Amber Laign, was diagnosed with breast cancer as well. Roberts spoke to Ellen DeGeneres about her partner’s diagnosis and– luckily– her optimistic prognosis.

“Like many people, [Laign] had put off going to the doctor during the pandemic, and then at the end of last year, she followed through with a regular breast exam and it was discovered,” Roberts said in her emotional appearance on Ellen. “So the message is: get those regular exams, it can save your life.”

Miranda McKeon
Miranda McKeon. Miranda McKeonAge at diagnosis: 19

The Anne with an E star was “one in a million” when she was diagnosed as a teen in the summer of 2021.

After finding a lump while adjusting her shirt, “I had the thought that, ‘Wow, this is the moment.’ I immediately went to the worst case scenario,” she told PEOPLE. “This is the moment where everything changes and there’s no going back. But after going down a little Google rabbit hole, my mind was at ease because I didn’t think anything could be wrong because of my age.”

Immediately immersed into treatments and appointments for stage 3 cancer that was in her lymph nodes, “My doctor was like, ‘Your stage doesn’t define you. And your cancer is your cancer.’ Which I appreciate because when you hear someone’s stage, your mind goes straight to one place or another and I don’t think that’s necessarily representative of what I’m going through.”

The actress keeps fans updated via her blog (including a recent look into how she was feeling post-breast reconstruction surgery) and says she sees the silver lining in that connection.

“The one thing that is super tangible that has come out of this where I’m like, ‘Damn, this is awesome,’ ” she said. “I’m hoping that by documenting a good majority of this, 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.”

Olivia Newton-John
Sipa; inset: amazon.comAges at diagnosis: 44, 64 and 68

Following a 1992 cancer diagnosis in her right breast, the Grease star underwent a modified radical mastectomy and a year of chemotherapy, herbs, acupuncture and mental imaging to cope with the nausea. “I visualized [the chemicals] as gold liquid going into my body, healing me, rather than what it really is, which is poison,” she told PEOPLE in 2000. “So, okay, I didn’t die. I was stronger than I thought.” Afterward, the breast cancer advocate released a 2005 album, Stronger than Before, dedicated to “going through difficulty and getting through it,” she revealed on Good Morning America at the time.

In May 2017, she announced she was diagnosed with breast cancer for the third time, and that the cancer had metastasized and spread to her bones. She later revealed that she had secretly faced the disease for a second time in private back in 2013.

She died in 2022 at the age of 73, but shared her story and raised awareness and funds right up until the end.

Sandra Lee
Jamie McCarthy/GettyAge at diagnosis: 48

Lee was leaving a photoshoot for PEOPLE’s Most Beautiful issue in March 2015 when she received the devastating news. She revealed her breast cancer diagnosis in an emotional Good Morning America interview just two months later.

Following a lumpectomy, which Lee had already received at the time of her GMA appearance, the TV chef said she had two options: she could get a mastectomy, or she would have to endure six to eight weeks of daily radiation treatments. “Both the radiologist and the doctor said, ‘You’re a ticking time bomb,'” the Food Network star recalled of her decision to undergo a double mastectomy.

At the time of Lee’s diagnosis, the medical community suggested women could wait until 50 to start getting regular mammograms. The Emmy-winning chef, whose cancer was caught in the early stages, urges others to follow her and start screening early. “If I would’ve waited, I probably wouldn’t even be sitting here,” she told GMA anchor Robin Roberts, who was diagnosed with breast cancer as well, at age 46.

In 2022, Lee shared with fans that she had undergone a hysterectomy after doctors noticed some concerning results at a check-up. “After that, there won’t be any more halo of worry hanging over my head,” she explained.

Hoda Kotb
Cindy Ord/GettyAge at diagnosis: 42

After discovering a lump in her breast, the Today anchor underwent a mastectomy and reconstructive surgery in March 2007, which she now credits with helping her better her life. “Staring down the scariest thing that could have happened to me gave me the strength to take on new challenges,” she said in 2008 on Today, which provided a platform to document her cancer journey. “When I got back to work, one of the first things I did was walk into my bosses’ offices … to tell them I wanted to be Today’s fourth-hour co-host. Before cancer, I don’t think I had the confidence to fight for the position, but now here I am, living my dream job.”

Kristen Dahlgren
NBC NewsAge at Diagnosis: 47

In 2016, NBC News correspondent reported a story on lesser-known signs of breast cancer (including dimpling, “dents” or redness) – then three years later, spotted one in herself. It turned out to be Stage 2 breast cancer.

“I remember thinking at the time, this story is going to save lives. And I just had no idea that the life it would save would be mine,” she said. “My thinking is, if that story saved my life, then maybe it can save someone else’s. And if someone sees this and notices a change in their breast and goes and gets it checked out, if one person is saved by that, then that makes it worth it to share my struggle.”

She’s currently in remission and still sharing her journey. In October 2020, she spoke about the next step, reconstruction, on the Today Show.

Mathew Knowles
Mathew Knowles. Courtesy Mathew KnowlesAge at Diagnosis: 67

The music producer and father to Beyoncé and Solange Knowles decided to see a doctor after noticing tiny spots of blood on his shirt and bedsheets. He discovered that he was one of the few men to be diagnosed with breast cancer (about 1 percent of the 270,000 annual diagnoses in America).

After successful treatment, he discovered that he has the BRCA gene, which can mutate and lead to cancer. He now encourages people (including his daughters) to learn more about their risk factors and whether genetic testing is right for them. And he’s focused on educating people about men’s risk of the cancer, which is often detected later (and thus can be more fatal) due to lack of awareness.

“A whole lot has to change in the education of men about breast cancer,” he says, adding that Black men are diagnosed with breast cancer at a 52 percent higher rate than white men. “I want to save lives, especially in the Black community,”

Mandy Gonzalez
Mandy Gonzalez. courtesy Mandy GonzalezAge at diagnosis: 40

When offered the option to get a mammogram during her regular check-up, the Hamilton star said yes (“because breast cancer tends to impact Latina women at a younger age than the general population”) – and after a second scan, she was officially diagnosed.

“Everything happened very fast, I was very fortunate that they were able to catch it early,” Gonzalez told PEOPLE in January 2020. “It’s important for women to know that early detection is key. As a community, as a society, we need to figure out a way so that everyone has access to a mammogram.”

She continued to perform as Angelica Schuyler in the hit Broadway musical while undergoing treatment, saying that singing was a source of strength for her. And in July, she got to ring the bell indicating her cancer-free status.

Now she raises awareness about early detection, and sees the positive in her journey. “I’ve come to see that sharing and exposing vulnerability is a sign of strength, not weakness,” she told PEOPLE. “Yes, I have breast cancer. But it does not define me. I am a mother, a wife, a daughter, a friend, an actress, a squad leader. None of that changes.”

Christina Applegate
Jon Kopaloff/GettyAge at diagnosis: 36

After watching her mother have cancer twice, Applegate was diagnosed with breast cancer in August 2008 and underwent a double mastectomy, even though cancer was detected in only one of her breasts. “Sometimes I cry. Sometimes I scream, and I get really angry,” the actress, now in remission, said on Good Morning America, “I think it’s all part of healing.”

Samantha Harris
Tibrina Hobson/WireImageAge at diagnosis: 40

Diagnosed with breast cancer in March of 2014 – and declared cancer-free that October – the TV host was able to see the silver lining in her situation. “While I lay in bed recovering from my mastectomy, my husband said to me, ‘Babe, when life gives you lemons, you gotta make lemonade’,” she recalled to PEOPLE. And the couple’s website, Gotta Make Lemonade, which “inspires positivity in the face of adversity,” per Harris, was born. “It’s a destination for visitors to submit their stories of overcoming a challenge – there are stories about battling through illness, infertility, injuries, depression,” she explained. “I didn’t realize just how much positivity could help you heal.”

Edie Falco
Dimitrios Kambouris/WireImageAge at diagnosis: 39

The ultra-private star only informed family, a few close friends and her bosses at HBO when she was diagnosed with an aggressive strain of breast cancer in 2003. “I don’t respond well to the sympathy thing,” she told PEOPLE in 2009, explaining that she filmed The Sopranos around her chemo appointments and donned an identical wig on the show. “We were shooting crazy hours, so I still looked better than everybody else,” she joked.

Lesley Murphy
Courtesy Lesley MurphyAge at high-risk diagnosis: 29

Like Angelina Jolie before her, Bachelor and Bachelor Winter Games alum Murphy found out she tested positive for the BRCA 2 gene mutation, which greatly increases her chance of developing breast cancer. Her mother was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2014, so Murphy — who placed fifth on Sean Lowe’s season of The Bachelor — chose to get ahead of her diagnosis and have a preventative double mastectomy in April 2017. “I was just kind of like, You know, I don’t really want to be sitting on these potentially cancerous cells. Like, why hang on to something that is a ticking time bomb?” Murphy told PEOPLE of the initial conversation with her doctor. Of fans’ support, she said, “It’s nice to share in commiserating or laughing with all these people who have come out to support me: complete strangers. I’m just scrolling through comments the other day and broke down crying because I just was overwhelmed with emotion and the goodness in humanity.”

Maura Tierney
Jordan Strauss/WireImageAge at diagnosis: 44

“I remember thinking, ‘I’m so young. This can’t be happening,'” Tierney told PEOPLE in July 2012, about three years after finding out she had breast cancer in 2009. The diagnosis meant she had to drop out of the NBC show Parenthood, but ultimately, it allowed her to focus on what’s important. “I think I always kind of lived in the moment,” she said. “But I spend a lot more time with my family now – that’s one solid difference.”

Jessica St. Clair
JB Lacroix/WireImageAge at diagnosis: 38

The Playing House star was serving her then-2-year-old daughter breakfast in 2015 when she realized something wasn’t right. Days later, she was diagnosed with stage 2B estrogen positive cancer. “I remember thinking, ‘I will do anything and everything I need to do to stay alive for my daughter and make sure this has the least amount of impact on her life’,” she recalled to PEOPLE.

After intense chemotherapy and a double mastectomy, she’s cancer-free, and en used her journey as inspiration for the new season of Playing House. “I knew we were going to have to tell the story, because [costar Lennon Parham] and I always write about what we’re going through in real life,” she said. “There are a lot of young moms going through this and I want them to know, ‘Hey, I can do this too!’ ”

Kristen Lara GetchellAge at diagnosis: 58

The actress (and wife of Tom Hanks) has an underlying condition she monitors regularly. An abnormality raised some red flags with her doctor, though cancer wasn’t detected. However, a friend urged Wilson to get a second opinion – at which time she found out she did in fact have breast cancer, and in April 2015, she told PEOPLE she’d had a bilateral mastectomy. “I share this to educate others that a second opinion is critical to your health,” she said. “You have nothing to lose if both opinions match up for the good, and everything to gain if something that was missed was found. I hope this will encourage others to get a second opinion and trust their instincts if something doesn’t ‘feel’ right.”

In 2017, Wilson penned an article in Harper’s BAZAAR that talked about the aftermath of having breast cancer. “We often assume that once you have had the surgery and treatment, you are fine,” Wilson writes. “And hopefully you are. But I found that there were unexpected things that came along with having gone through something as frightening as having had cancer that I only heard about from my friends who’d had cancer too.”

Giuliana Rancic
Courtesy Giuliana RancicAge at diagnosis: 37

“The second I heard ‘cancer,’ I just remember my head went down, the ground went away, and I just dropped through the earth, and I was just dropping, falling,” the E! host recalled on her reality show after learning she had breast cancer during a 2011 mammogram while undergoing a round of in vitro fertilization. But Rancic, who underwent a double lumpectomy and a double mastectomy to treat the cancer, marked a very special milestone just months later: her first Mother’s Day with son Edward Duke.

“The key for me is getting out there and encouraging women to find it early,” she told PEOPLE. “More women find their breast cancer themselves than at the doctor or mammogram. I have women all the time who say, ‘I found my breast cancer early because of you and I’m going to be okay.'”

Sheryl Crow
Kevin Winter/GettyAge at diagnosis: 44

Just weeks after calling off her engagement to Lance Armstrong, the singer was diagnosed with an early stage of breast cancer in February 2006, later undergoing a lumpectomy and radiation treatment. Rather than feel bad on her difficult year, Crow said it was a positive for her: “It brought me to this point where I am now, and I really feel like I have a lot of clarity.”

These days she is a huge advocate for early screening, recently speaking out to encourage women to get mammograms rather than put them off in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. “I’m encouraging women to not let that yearly appointment go by because it can mean a huge difference in the kind of diagnosis you receive, if you are diagnosed with breast cancer,” she told PEOPLE in September. “We have a cure — early detection — and it’s our greatest weapon.”

Lisa Vidal
Gabe Ginsberg/FilmMagicAge at diagnosis: Unknown

On a November 2016 episode of The Real, the Being Mary Jane actress talked about her diagnosis of invasive ductal carcinoma, found not by a mammogram, but an ultrasound. “A mammogram is like a snow storm and you’re trying to find a snowflake,” she said. “You don’t see it until it’s much worse and so that’s why I really, kind of, want to advocate for women to get ultrasounds and early detection. The good thing was that it was treatable.”

Melissa Etheridge
Kevin Mazur/WireimageAge at diagnosis: 43

When the singer took the stage at the 2005 Grammy Awards with a show-stopping rendition of Janis Joplin’s “Piece of My Heart,” she famously performed bald – a reminder of her October 2004 breast cancer diagnosis. “I’m feeling great,” she proclaimed to PEOPLE. Years later, performing 10,000 feet up in the air for a 2009 Breast Cancer Research Foundation benefit, Etheridge said, “My health is better now than it’s ever been. Cancer woke me up.”

Mindy Cohn
Ty R. AshfordAge at diagnosis: 46

Now healthy, the Facts of Life star was diagnosed in 2012, and went through her battle largely alone, telling very few friends as she faded from the spotlight during treatment. But once she opened up a bit, “so many people began reaching out, wanting to help,” she told PEOPLE. For Cohn it was a lesson in humility. “I needed to be vulnerable,” she said. “I had to learn that asking for help is not me being weak—it’s actually beautiful.”

Kylie Minogue
Kevin Mazur/WireImageAge at diagnosis: 36

After an initial misdiagnosis, the Australian pop star postponed her Showgirl tour to undergo treatment for breast cancer in 2005. “When you are stripped of everything and you have to grow your eyelashes back, grow your hair back, it’s just astonishing,” Minogue later opened up in the November 2007 issue of British Glamour. “It’s hard to express what I’ve learned from that, but a deep psychological and emotional shift has obviously taken place.”

Cynthia Nixon
Bryan Smith/ZUMAAge at diagnosis: 40

Six years before the Sex and the City alum and former New York gubernatorial candidate shaved her head to portray a cancer patient in Broadway’s 2012 production of Wit, Nixon was diagnosed with breast cancer after a routine mammogram, which she revealed 18 months later when she became an official ambassador for the Susan G. Komen for the Cure foundation. “I felt scared,” the mother of three told ABC at the time. “And I thought, ‘Oh, I don’t want this to be happening.’ I was very cognizant of if it’s going to happen, this is the best way for it to happen – that it’s found so early, and we can just get right on it.”

Suzanne Somers
Evan Agostini/GettyAge at diagnosis: 54

After revealing on Larry King Live in 2001 that she was battling breast cancer (without chemotherapy), Somers was inspired to put pen to paper in her 2010 book Knockout, in which she explored alternative treatment methods. “Saying the words publicly out loud – ‘I have cancer’ – rocked my soul,” she recalled to PEOPLE of her public announcement.

Kathy Bates
Jason LaVeris/FilmMagicAge at diagnosis: 55

Bates was first diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2003, and then breast cancer in 2012. She decided to have a double mastectomy because of her family history with cancer. “My aunt had died from it, my mother had it, my niece had it,” she told PEOPLE. She tested negative for the BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene mutation that increases a woman’s risk of breast and ovarian cancer. A negative BRCA result is “not a get out of jail free card,” she said.

Amy Foster
Amy Foster/ Instagram.Age at diagnosis: 45

The daughter of producer David Foster and author of Rift Coda shared a photo of herself getting an MRI to announce that she had been diagnosed with the disease.

In addition to the picture, Foster further destigmatized the treatment by saying, “if you are a lady out there and you feel something in your boob — go get a mammogram. KNOWING IS BETTER…even if it’s the worst news you can hear.” She wrote that in her case, early detection meant she would need a mastectomy but not chemotherapy.