• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
BlackDoctor.org
Where Wellness & Culture Connect

Where Wellness & Culture Connect

  • Conditions
  • Wellness
  • Lifestyle
  • Longevity
  • Clinical Trials
  • Resources
    • Generational Health
    • Top Blacks in Healthcare 2025
    • Hall Of Fame
    • Clinical Trials Resource Center
    • Obesity Resource Center
    • Cancer Resource Center
    • Wellness on the Yard
    • Immunocompromised Care
    • BDO Resource Library
  • Find A Doctor
  • BDO TV
Home / Health Conditions / Breast Cancer / Robin Roberts on Beating Cancer Twice and How Her Sister Saved Her Life

Robin Roberts on Beating Cancer Twice and How Her Sister Saved Her Life

(Photo credit: facebook.com)

In 2007, the world wept when they learned of Robin Roberts’ cancer battle – she had been diagnosed with a rare form of breast cancer. In 2012, they were again devastated when the co-anchor of Good Morning America announced she was suffering from MDS as a result of her breast cancer treatment.

This year in 2017, Robin Roberts celebrates her 5-year bone marrow transplant “Birthday” and free from MDS. Check out her touching video tribute below:

Once again, Robin has made a victorious return to Good Morning America after recovering from a live-saving bone marrow transplant. While the world marvels at her grace and indomitable spirit of optimism, African-American women proudly celebrate her sisterhood.

You May Also Like
Psoriatic Arthritis Can Feel Beyond Your Control. Consider a Different Direction. Learn More Here. Psoriatic Arthritis Can Feel Beyond Your Control. Consider a Different Direction. Learn More Here.

For many Black women, when Roberts was diagnosed, breast cancer finally had a face….and it was as devastating as if a friend or family member had been diagnosed.

Her First Time Beating Cancer as Hard

Two years earlier, in June 2005, after a 5-year stint as an ESPN sportscaster, Robin was promoted to co-anchor of GMA. Like a bright smile rapidly spreading across the face of the nation, Robin, along with co-host George Stephanopoulos, became a friendly, familiar, trusted face on the popular morning show.

Never was Robin’s strength more apparent than when she vowed to beat it and return to her GMA chair. Quietly turning tragedy into inspiration, Robin allowed the world to watch as she bravely underwent surgery, before going on to complete chemotherapy, followed by radiation treatments.

You May Also Like
Get GLP-1s Delivered to You As Low As $99/Month! Get GLP-1s Delivered to You As Low As $99/Month!

Robin’s gift to women all over the world was her teaching – by example – the importance of early diagnosis in improving your chances of surviving breast cancer.

By January of 2008. after making a full recovery, we cheered as we watched Robin Roberts celebrate her victory over breast cancer with a triumphant return to Good Morning America.

robin-roberts-and-sister
(Robin Roberts and sister. Photo credit: Robin Roberts facebook)

Her Second Time Being Diagnosed with Cancer Was Devastating

Five years after beating breast cancer, in January of 2012, the world was once again stunned and shocked when Robin Roberts bravely announced yet another life and death battle had presented itself in her life. Ironically enough, Robin received the diagnosis on the very day that Good Morning America finally beat the Today Show for the first time in 16 years. Her announcement was simple and courageous;

“Today, I want to let you know that I’ve been diagnosed with MDS or myelodysplastic syndrome. It’s a disease of the blood and bone marrow and was once known as pre-leukemia.”

According to the Mayo Clinic, myelodysplastic syndromes are a group of disorders caused by blood cells that are poorly formed or don’t work properly. Myelodysplastic syndromes result from something amiss in the spongy material inside your bones where blood cells are made (bone marrow).

People with myelodysplastic syndromes might not experience signs and symptoms at first.

In time, myelodysplastic syndromes might cause:

  • Fatigue
  • Shortness of breath
  • Unusual paleness (pallor), which occurs due to a low red blood cell count (anemia)
  • Easy or unusual bruising or bleeding, which occurs due to a low blood platelet count (thrombocytopenia)
  • Pinpoint-sized red spots just beneath the skin that are caused by bleeding (petechiae)
  • Frequent infections, which occur due to a low white blood cell count (leukopenia)

“I don’t want to be sick again. I’ve been sick — I don’t feel sick right now,” Roberts reasoned. “I don’t want to be bald and throwing up again. But then, I [say to myself] ‘Do you want to live?’ Yeah, I want to live.”

The beloved news anchor’s sister, and a mother-of-three, Sally-Ann Roberts, said how she had been so desperate to be a match for her sister, she and her friends made a prayer circle around the test kit.

How Her Sister Saved Her Life

When she was declared by doctors to be a perfect match and did the procedure with no hesitation, giving her sister the much needed bone marrow and helping her to be healthy once again

“I don’t feel any fear about the procedure,” Sally Ann said back in 2012. “I pray for Robin to have three things: Supernatural strength, supernatural wisdom and supernatural favor.”

Even though Sally Ann was praised by Robin as “giving her life”, she had one ulterior motive she confessed right before surgery: “I want to be here to celebrate Robin’s 90th birthday — because that will make me 98,” she joked.

Amazingly enough, once again Robin’s selfless desire to share her fight for life motivated people in a mighty way. Noting that bone marrow donors are scarce, particularly for African-American women, Robin encouraged everyone to sign up on a donor registry.

TAKE A LOOK: 6 Things In Your Home That Can Cause Cancer

Be-the-Match Registry, a nonprofit organization run by the National Marrow Donor Program, experienced an 1,800% spike in donors the day Ms. Roberts went public with her illness.

Since announcing her diagnosis, more than 100,000 people have come forward to register to become bone marrow donors. Robin was fortunate enough to have a sister who was an excellent match which greatly improved her chances for a cure.

By Derrick Lane | Published September 20, 2024

September 20, 2024 by Deborah Easton, BDO Contributing Writer

The Latest In Breast Cancer

A Clinical Trial Extended the Life of Women With Hard-to-Treat Breast Cancer

A Clinical Trial Extended the Life of Women With Hard-to-Treat Breast Cancer

An experimental hormone therapy pill has shown promise in extending the lives of women with tough-to-treat advanced breast cancer, a new clinical trial shows. The drug, imlunestrant, improved progression-free survival in patients whose breast cancer was driven by the female hormone read more about A Clinical Trial Extended the Life of Women With Hard-to-Treat Breast Cancer
breast cancer

These Two Women Are Amplifying the Voices of Black Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Survivors

While Breast Cancer Awareness is top of mind for most during the month of October, another pervasive aspect of the disease that should be spotlighted all year long is the racial disparities in healthcare, especially toward Black breast cancer patients. read more about These Two Women Are Amplifying the Voices of Black Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Survivors
clinical trials

5 Reasons to Enroll Yourself in Clinical Trials

Finding newer medicines and medical devices requires constant effort from scientists to find a better cure for patients. Clinical trials are field tests conducted on volunteers and are the final steps for a given scientific product development before bringing it read more about 5 Reasons to Enroll Yourself in Clinical Trials
family history

Make Collecting Family Health History Part Of Your Thanksgiving Plans

For some, being home for the holidays means lots of extra family time, often with multiple generations coming together to celebrate under one roof. Most likely, your conversations at this time will center around what’s new at work or what read more about Make Collecting Family Health History Part Of Your Thanksgiving Plans
Why I Did a Trial for TNBC: "It Very Likely Saved And Extended My Life"

Why I Did Clinical Trials for TNBC: “It Very Likely Saved And Extended My Life”

My cancer journey began in 2015 during a routine mammogram that revealed a mass in my breast, which turned out to be Triple-Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC), a rare and aggressive form of the disease. In my 50s and coming from read more about Why I Did Clinical Trials for TNBC: “It Very Likely Saved And Extended My Life”
dense breasts

Have Dense Breasts? Here’s Why a Standard Mammogram Might Not Be Enough

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women globally. In the United States, about one in eight women will be diagnosed with breast cancer at some point in their lives.  Breast cancer screenings—such as self-exams and mammograms—are crucial for read more about Have Dense Breasts? Here’s Why a Standard Mammogram Might Not Be Enough

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe to our newsletter

Icon

Caring for You, Too - Caregiver Workbook

1 file(s) 297 KB
Download

Trending Articles

Stage 4 Lung Cancer: Why I Said Yes to a Clinical Trial

Stage 4 Lung Cancer: Why I Said Yes to a Clinical Trial

This Clinical Trial Is Making HIV Treatment Easier for Black People

This Clinical Trial Is Making HIV Treatment Easier for Black People

A Clinical Trial Extended the Life of Women With Hard-to-Treat Breast Cancer

A Clinical Trial Extended the Life of Women With Hard-to-Treat Breast Cancer

This Reverend Wants to Change How You View Clinical Trials: “We’re Not Going to Have Another Tuskegee”

This Reverend Wants to Change How You View Clinical Trials: "We're Not Going to Have Another Tuskegee"

These Two Women Are Amplifying the Voices of Black Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Survivors

breast cancer
Find a Culturally Sensitive Doctor

Footer

Where Wellness & Culture Connect

BDO is the world’s largest and most comprehensive online health resource specifically targeted to African Americans. BDO understands that the uniqueness of Black culture - our heritage and our traditions - plays a role in our health. BDO gives you access to innovative new approaches to the health information you need in everyday language so you can break through the disparities, gain control and live your life to its fullest.

Connect With Us

Resource Centers

  • Top Blacks in Healthcare
  • Clinical Trials
  • Wellness on the Yard
  • Cancer
  • Immunocompromised Care
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Careers
  • Advertise With Us
  • Advertising & Sponsorship Policy
  • Daily Vitamina
  • TBH

Copyright © 2025, Black Doctor, Inc. All rights reserved.