Tina Knowles Opens Up About Her Diagnosis and Recovery
Tina Knowles, mother to Beyoncé and Solange, has revealed her private battle with breast cancer. At 71, she was diagnosed with stage 1 breast cancer in July 2024. She is now cancer-free and wants her story to serve as a warning and a source of hope.
“It’s important not to slack on your mammograms,” she told PEOPLE. She had delayed a checkup due to the pandemic and later found a tumor that required surgery. Knowles believes early detection saved her life.
Missed Mammogram Could Have Changed Everything
Knowles admits she missed a mammogram because of COVID-19 disruptions. “I forgot that I didn’t go to get my test two years before I thought I had,” she said. “They canceled it and told me they’d call back. I just assumed it was done.”
That delay could have been deadly. She wants women, especially Black women, to know how easy it is to forget—and how dangerous that can be. “You cannot play around with that,” she stressed.
Her Daughters’ Powerful Reactions
Tina’s daughters stood strong when they heard the news. Beyoncé remained calm and focused. Solange comforted her mom and promised they’d face it together. “My girls became my team,” Tina shared in her new memoir, Matriarch.
Kelly Rowland and her niece Angie Beyince also stepped in with love and support. The experience reminded her of the strength found in sisterhood and family. It’s a lesson she now shares with the world.
No Family History, Still Diagnosed
Surprisingly, Knowles has no known family history of breast cancer and does not carry the BRCA gene. Yet, she still developed the disease. Her ex-husband, Mathew Knowles, is also a breast cancer survivor and carries the BRCA2 mutation.
Tina’s story shows how cancer can affect anyone. She says she never knew about “stage 0” cancer until her own diagnosis. “I could have caught this at stage 0 if I had not missed my mammogram,” she reflected.
A New Chapter: Wellness, Memoir, and Hope
Today, Knowles is focused on self-care and living fully. “I’m healthier, eating better, I lost weight,” she said. She wants women to know that you can face cancer and still be stylish, strong, and full of life.
Her memoir Matriarch shares her full story—her pain, her fight, and her recovery. Most of all, she hopes her words will inspire action. “What scares me now is not making the best of every day that I have left in this life,” she said.







