For Rozzie Brilliant, surviving ovarian cancer was a family affair. What she learned about her own cancer led a family member who'd inherited the same genetic predisposition for breast and ovarian cancer to also get the care they needed.
Her Cancer Diagnosis Saved a Life
When Brilliant learned she had ovarian cancer, she confirmed a lifelong suspicion. She had always believed the disease ran in her family and that she was likely to get it, too. Both her mother and grandmother had ovarian cancer. Genetic testing revealed that Brilliant carried an inherited mutation in the BRCA1 gene that raises the risk for breast and ovarian cancer substantially.
Read MoreFrom Caregiver to Self-Care
Before Brilliant learned she had ovarian cancer, she was her husband's full-time caregiver. He was living with a rare autoimmune disease. But, Brilliant's children feared their mother couldn't take care of herself while she was also taking care of their father.
"My husband was willing to go to a nursing home so they could take care of him and I could take care of me," she says. "It was emotional. It was extremely difficult."
But, Brilliant and her husband made the most of it. She was at the nursing home with him from noon till five, seven days a week. They had lunch together every day. And on Saturday nights, with the help of a driver Brilliant hired, the two continued to go out on date nights with their friends.
"Just like everybody else," she says.
Now, Brilliant has been a cancer survivor for seven and a half years. She is grateful for the genetic information that may prevent other women in her family from dying of the same disease.
"It's my belief and my children's belief that knowledge is power," she says.
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