Tatiana Schlossberg, JFK's Granddaughter, Reveals Terminal Cancer Diagnosis
Tatiana Schlossberg has a rare Inversion 3 mutation AML and faces less than a year to live despite chemotherapy, two stem-cell transplants, and clinical trials, she revealed in The New Yorker.
- On Saturday, Tatiana Schlossberg, granddaughter of President John F. Kennedy, disclosed in The New Yorker that she has terminal leukemia, with doctors estimating she may have about a year to live.
- Shortly after giving birth, doctors found Tatiana Schlossberg's white‑blood‑cell count reached 131,000, far above normal, diagnosing acute myeloid leukemia with Inversion 3.
- Undergoing treatment, Schlossberg had chemotherapy, two stem-cell transplants—first from sister Rose Schlossberg, then from an unrelated donor—and joined a CAR‑T‑cell therapy trial in January.
- Her family reports that Caroline Kennedy and Edwin Schlossberg, along with siblings Rose and Jack Schlossberg, help raise her two young children while George Moran, husband, provides care during hospital stays.
- Criticizing policy, Schlossberg wrote that NIH funding cuts, including `nearly a half billion dollars` for mRNA research, threaten clinical trials and patient care, she said.
235 Articles
235 Articles
She suffers from terminal cancer, writes Kennedy-Enkelin Tatiana Schlossberg in an essay. Her uncle's health policy, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., harms people like her that he is "a shame" for her family.
Tatiana Schlossberg, 35, daughter of Caroline Kennedy and mother of two young children, announces in an upsetting text being reached by an incurable leukemia.
JFK’s granddaughter, Tatiana Schlossberg, reveals terminal cancer diagnosis
Tatiana Schlossberg, the granddaughter of President John F. Kennedy, disclosed that she has been diagnosed with terminal cancer in a deeply personal essay published in the New Yorker magazine on Saturday. In “A Battle With My Blood,” the 35-year-old environmental journalist wrote that the illness was discovered shortly after she gave birth to her daughter in May 2024. Her doctor noticed an abnormally high white blood cell count in the hours foll…
Tatiana Schlossberg, 35 years old and daughter of Caroline Kennedy, reported in a trial that she was diagnosed hours after delivery, in May 2024, and that doctors today give her a maximum of one year of life.
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