With Cancer in Remission, What is the New Normal for Princess Kate?

January 22, 2025
Alex Biese
Alex Biese

A nationally-published, award-winning journalist, Alex Biese joined the CURE team as an assistant managing editor in April 2023. Prior to that, Alex's work was published in outlets including the Chicago Sun-Times, MTV.com, USA TODAY and the Press of Atlantic City. Alex is a member of NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists, and also performs at the Jersey Shore with the acoustic jam band Somewhat Relative.

CURE® spoke with experts about what life is like for patients with cancer when their disease is in remission.

With Kate, Princess of Wales, announcing that her cancer is in remission, the news begs the question: What is life like for someone after cancer?

“Often it's kind of a series of physical adjustments,” Dr. Kevin Billingsley, surgical oncologist and chief medical officer at Yale Cancer Center and Smilow Cancer Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut, told CURE®. “It takes weeks to months to recover from the physical rigors, often of a combination of chemotherapy and surgery. Even young, healthy people such as the princess, need to rebuild themselves, often with a program involving exercise under the guidance of a trainer or physical therapist, as well as some nutritional consultation.

“It can take longer than people expect. There's also the emotional adjustments of getting back into the normal flow of life and dealing with the uncertainty that a cancer diagnosis is accompanied by. This is because even when treatments are highly successful, people live with the uncertainty that cancer may return at some point, which can be quite stressful.”

“It is a relief to now be in remission and I remain focused on recovery,” the princess, born Kate Middleton, 43, wrote on Instagram on Jan. 14. “As anyone who has experienced a cancer diagnosis will know, it takes time to adjust to a new normal.”

Kate announced in March 2024 that she had received a diagnosis of cancer, and said in September that she had finished chemotherapy treatments. The type of cancer has never been disclosed.

Remission itself, Billingsley explained, is something of a “non-specific” term.

“It is generally applied to individuals who have undergone cancer treatment, either with surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, biologic therapies or some combination of therapies and their cancer is no longer detectable. It's not evident on physical examination, X-rays, CT scans or other traditional detection methods,” Billingsley said. “It, unfortunately, does not mean that the cancer is completely eradicated and will not return at some point, however.”

“What Kate is moving into is what we refer to commonly as the survivorship care period,” Frank J. Penedo told CURE. He is Center Associate Director, Cancer Survivorship and Translational Behavioral Sciences; Director, Cancer Survivorship and Supportive Care; and Director, Biopsychosocial Mechanisms and Health Outcomes (BMHO) Lab, at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center in Miami.

“The [National Cancer Institute] defines a cancer survivor as somebody from the day of diagnosis through the balance of their life,” Penedo said. “Survivorship care is the care that a person is receiving in addition to their medical treatment post-completion of their primary treatments. In that survivorship care, it's really critical that the patient remains very involved with their care team for a variety of reasons.”

“The follow-up care is really important, particularly for a young person with cancer,” said Billingsley. “If there is indication of recurrent cancer or recurrent disease, we would want to get them back into some kind of treatment program, and that could be any number of treatments, but it's critically important that people maintain a relationship with their oncologist as well as undergo a well-defined set of follow up examinations, which are usually a combination of often blood tests as well as imaging studies.”

Overall, regarding cancer survivorship, we find ourselves in what Billingsley described as a very exciting time in oncology.

“We are curing more patients, more people, with the entire spectrum of treatments that we have available, including traditional cancer treatment, which is surgery, radiation and chemotherapy,” he said, “but with the advent of immunotherapy and biologic therapies and other targeted agents, we have an expanding repertoire of very active treatments that really enhance our capability to cure or manage cancer for extended periods of time. And more and more, we are looking at managing cancer like any other chronic disease, where what once was considered incurable now will be not only treatable, but treatable for months to years, in many cases.”

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