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Husband and wife Rollie and Judy Massey both were diagnosed with breast cancer within about seven months of each other. They both received modified radical mastectomies and now live cancer-free.
/ The Herald Bulletin


Published October 02, 2009 12:02 pm - ANDERSON — When Judy Massey found out a lump in her right breast was cancerous, she wasn’t scared. She had already seen the effects of breast cancer, already been through the surgery and post-operation procedures and healing. She had already handled the uncertainty and terror that comes with such a diagnosis.

Husband and wife beat breast cancer together
Rollie and Judy Massey diagnosed just seven months apart

By Aleasha Sandley, Herald Bulletin Staff Writer

ANDERSON — When Judy Massey found out a lump in her right breast was cancerous, she wasn’t scared.

She had already seen the effects of breast cancer, already been through the surgery and post-operation procedures and healing. She had already handled the uncertainty and terror that comes with such a diagnosis.

The cancerous lump, however, was Massey’s first. Her experience and knowledge of the devastating effects of cancer had come seven months earlier, when her husband, Rollie Massey, was diagnosed with breast cancer.

“I think having gone through his first, I really wasn’t real scared,” Judy Massey said. “I was more concerned with his. I don’t think I reacted real uptight or frightened.”

Rollie Massey’s breast cancer puzzled the couple when he was diagnosed in October 2003. He discovered a lump under his left nipple but didn’t think much of it.

“I just had an itch,” he said. “I scratched it and found it. Men didn’t have breast cancer then.”

Rollie Massey went to his family doctor, where his lump was diagnosed as breast cancer. He later found that the BRAC-2 gene that increases the likelihood of hereditary breast cancer had been passed down through his family and he was a carrier.

“My family never talked about cancer,” Rollie Massey said. “It will kill you. I wanted to live, and that’s why I talk about it.”

A routine mammogram found Judy Massey’s lump in May 2004, about seven months after her husband had been diagnosed. Judy Massey had been having mammograms for years thanks to other benign lumps she had found in her 30s.

“From then on, I faithfully had mammograms every year,” she said. “I always knew that someday down the road it could become cancer. I just felt it.”

After both having modified radical mastectomies to remove one of their breasts, the Masseys — married for 49 years — have been through many of the same experiences.

“This is just little bit too much together,” Judy Massey joked.

The two are cancer-free now, having beat their cancers without the need for chemotherapy or radiation treatments. They go in for regular check-ups and live with the knowledge that the cancer could come back one day — particularly in their brains, bones, kidneys or livers.

“Any time you have something abnormal you always think this could be cancer,” Judy Massey said of life after the disease. “You know that you got it once and it’s possible to get it again.”

Although the Masseys have since lost friends and family members to cancer, including breast cancer, they are most thankful that their ordeal might have saved the life of their daughter.



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