Husband and wife both victims of breast cancer
Michael and Barbara Welsh, ages 62 and 63, use humor to fight the disease
Video |
Husband, wife both battle breast cancer Oct. 23: After seeing his wife, Barbara, through her treatment for breast cancer, Michael Welsh was also diagnosed with the disease. TODAY’s Natalie Morales talks to the couple and Dr. Kathie-Ann Joseph about their story. Today show |
FirstPerson |
Standing up to cancer TODAY viewers who have battled breast cancer share their stories of survival and lessons learned. |
Quiz |
What do you know about breast cancer? How old was Betty Ford when she had a mastectomy? How many women are affected by the disease each year? Take our iCue video quiz and find out. TODAY |
Join the Army of Women |
A message from Dr. Susan Love, MD The time has come for all women to stand up and say that we are not going to take it anymore! Breast cancer does not have to go on to another generation; we can be the ones who stop it once and for all! Join the Love/Avon Army of Women for you mother, sister, friend and daughter so that no one ever has to hear the words “you have breast cancer” again! Video: Dr. Love announces her Army of Women initiative on TODAY |
Slide show |
Famous breast cancer survivors Actresses, singers and a politician’s wife who’ve all been diagnosed with the disease reveal their strength to keep fighting. more photos |
Breast cancer videos |
Look and feel your best after cancer Oct. 27: Three experts share advice for breast cancer survivors on coping with the appearance-related side effects of breast cancer treatment. |
Through 41 years of marriage, Michael and Barbara Welsh expected to share just about everything, for better or worse. But they never thought one of those things would be breast cancer.
The Ohio couple are a medical curiosity: a husband and wife both diagnosed with a disease far more common in women, but not unknown in men. They are using the publicity generated by their story to spread the word that breast cancer isn’t just a women’s disease.
“I didn’t know that men could get breast cancer,” Michael Welsh told TODAY’s Natalie Morales Friday in New York. “You see all the ads on TV, the women doing the monthly exams. You never see a man doing that. So how are we supposed to know?”
Michael was joined by his wife, a petite woman whose salt-and-pepper hair is starting to grow back now that she has completed her chemo and radiation treatments.
“If nothing else, we’ve got one another,” she said of their shared battle. “I’m in it for him, and he’s in it for me.”
Not a pulled muscle
The Welshes’ story began in December 2008, when Barbara discovered a lump in her right breast. After a lumpectomy, she underwent chemo and radiation treatments that ended Thursday.
While Barbara, 63, was undergoing her treatment, Mike, 62, discovered that he, too, had breast cancer. “I happened to get in the car, put my seat belt on,” he told Morales. “It was uncomfortable. I moved around a little bit, and it didn’t get much better, so I eventually went to my family doctor, and mentioned, ‘Hey, I got a problem.’ He said, ‘Where?’ ”
Mike said he thought he might have pulled a muscle doing yard work, but it turned out to be much more serious. His doctor sent him to get a mammogram, which Mike described as a test not designed for male breasts and sheer torture.
When he got the diagnosis, he couldn’t believe it. “It was devastating,” he said. “It was, for lack of a better word, surreal, because men, they don’t get breast cancer.”
After undergoing a mastectomy for his stage 4 cancer, Mike is looking at a regimen of oral chemo treatment and possibly radiation. “My prognosis is good,” the bearded father of one and grandfather of five said.
Rare in men
Just 1 percent of all breast cancers occur in men, but that still amounts to nearly 2,000 cases in the United States each year. An estimated 40,000 women and 440 men die each year from the disease, according to the National Cancer Institute.
“Male breast cancer is rare, and because it is rare, it’s hard to define what the risk factors are,” oncologist Kathie-Ann Joseph of New York-Presbyterian Hospital told Morales. “Mike is a classic example. It affects older men, men in their 60s and 70s. There are hereditary risk factors that are associated with it. Twenty percent of all men who get breast cancer have the genetic predisposition for it.”
![]() |
TODAY Michael and Barbara Welsh, both victims of breast cancer, have been married for 41 years. |
“Men should be aware of their bodies, just like women,” Joseph said. “We do recommend that men check their breasts.”
Laughter, the best medicine
Fortunately, the couple are able to laugh about the unanticipated bond they share. Barbara coped with her hair loss by wearing rainbow-colored wigs around town. She didn’t wear one to the TODAY show Friday, but she did sport a pink sweatshirt with the legend “I’m a breast cancer survivor.” Michael wore a pink breast cancer wristband.
Now that she has completed her treatment, Barbara told Morales, “I’m doing wonderful. I will be glad when I get hair.”
She added that to show solidarity, “My son even shaved his head for me.”
With Mike yet to undergo treatment, the couple still have a fight ahead of them. But they’re grateful for how their unusual fate has brought them even closer together. They also share a certainty about where they’ll be a year from now.
Said Barbara: “We will be together — doing whatever.”
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM HEALTH |
| Add Health headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide





