Kate Middleton at The Royal Marsden Hospital in London on Jan. 14, 2025.Photo:Chris Jackson/Getty
Chris Jackson/Getty
Kate Middletonshared that she faced hercancer treatment"quietly and privately" during a visit to the London hospital where she received care, offering insight into the isolating experience.
“Going through the back door unseen while going through the treatment must have been pretty lonely,” a close royal insider tells PEOPLE in this week’sexclusive cover story. “When you see these other people when they’re having their chemotherapy, they were doing it as a group, with a support mechanism.”
The Princess of Wales, 43,contrasted her own experiencewhile visiting The Royal Marsden Hospital in London on Jan. 14, whichcoincided with the confirmationthat she previously received treatment there during her cancer journey.
Admitting the difference, Kate said, “I had to do it privately and quietly, but being on a ward like this has to be reassuring in a way.” She shared the sentiment while speaking with Katherine Field, who was in the midst of her fourth chemotherapy session for breast cancer during the princess’s visit.
Kate Middleton and Katherine Field at The Royal Marsden Hospital in London on Jan. 14, 2025.Chris Jackson/Getty
For Field, the camaraderie among patients sharing chemotherapy sessions has been a source of comfort.
“There is a real sense of community,” she tells PEOPLE, drawing a contrast to Princess Kate’s private ordeal, but said speaking with Kate was “just liketalking to a friend.”
For much of 2024, the Princess of Wales slipped through a secluded door at the Royal Marsden Hospital and attended regular chemotherapy sessions away from the public eye. It was a lonely path during the most challenging year of her life.
Princess Kate was diagnosed with an undisclosed type of cancer following seriousabdominal surgeryon Jan. 16, 2024, and kept it confidential for several weeks as she andPrince Williamworked to process the enormity of the news and explain it to their children,Prince George,Princess CharlotteandPrince Louis.
The Princess of Wales announced to the world last March that she was undergoing treatment for cancer, and relayed in September that she hadcompleted chemotherapy.
PEOPLE Magazine, Feb. 3, 2025.
One year after her abdominal surgery, Kate walked confidently through the Royal Marsden’s front entrance for the first time. She returned not only as a woman in remission, but also as an advocate for those still in the midst of their fight.
Angela Terry, a lung cancer patient, tells PEOPLE that Kate’s “gentle eye contact” and “level of connection” left an impression. The royal also reassured Rebecca Mendlesohn, who is in a trial for metastatic cancer, and wrapped her in an emotional embrace.
“It will get better. There is light at the end of the tunnel. You’re in the best hands,” she told the patient.
Kate Middleton and Rebecca Mendelhson at The Royal Marsden Hospital in London on Jan. 14, 2025.Chris Jackson/Getty
Kate would know. After leaving the hospital, she released a statement expressing her gratitude to the Royal Marsden staff “for looking after me so well during the past year” and shared her “relief to now be in remission.” The princess paid tribute to the support she had received, sharing “heartfelt thanks” to “all those who have quietly walked alongside William and me as we have navigated everything.”
“It has been a tough journey — harder than we perhaps thought,” says a source close to the royal household. “She has been through a lot, and it has been a rough road. Serious illness like cancer does change you. She has a young family, and it makes you rethink everything — your purpose and what you want to do with your life.”
Peter Burton and Kate Middleton at The Royal Marsden Hospital in London on Jan. 14, 2025.Chris Jackson/Getty
In a meaningful nod to tradition, Prince William and Princess Kate wereconfirmed as joint patrons of the hospitalon the day of her visit. The roles carry forward the legacy of William’s mother,Princess Diana, who became president of the center in 1989.
While Kate’s hospital stop was a bright spot for those currently receiving care, royal historian and writer Dr. Amanda Foreman believes the visit would have been “beyond draining” for her, both psychologically and physically.
“She’s like a gold medal Olympic skater, where they make their moves look so easy, but you forget that it requires incredible skill and self-control and discipline,” Foreman tells PEOPLE.
Kate Middleton at The Royal Marsden Hospital in London on Jan. 14, 2025.CHRIS JACKSON/POOL/AFP via Getty
CHRIS JACKSON/POOL/AFP via Getty
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Princess Kate’s yearlong experience and her carefully measured openness, shared only when she was ready, have deepened the public’s admiration for her, Foreman observes.
“What the treatment has done is remove a filter and create this immediacy between her and the public,” she says. “I can’t think of a working royal who has ever done that.”
For more on Princess Kate’s new life in remission, pick up PEOPLE’s latest issue, on newsstands Friday.
source: people.com