At age 31, Aubrey Morgart never thought about breast cancer. When she felt a lump in her left breast six years ago, her OB-GYN told her it was an activated milk duct from breastfeeding her daughter. There was no reason to believe otherwise.
“They didn’t send me right away for a mammogram. It wasn’t scheduled until two weeks later. I thought ‘OK, it must not be anything serious,’” recounted Morgart, a store manager who lives inBedford, Pennsylvania. “I went for my mammogram, and they sent me to an ultrasound, and then back to mammogram, then back to ultrasound. At that point I knew something was up … My biopsy was scheduled for the next day and I knew by Friday that I had breast cancer.”
Specifically, Morgart was diagnosed with stage three, HER2-positive breast cancer, which is more aggressive than other forms of cancer. She had just returned from her honeymoon with her husband, and was juggling a full-time job and a toddler. This was no time for cancer.
Morgart decided to move forward and get the best treatment possible, without thinking negatively.
“I stopped reading anything online. People don’t write about the positive. If I can put a positive spin on it as much as I can, then that is important,” Morgart recounted thinking. “Let’s get this s— on the road, get it out of my body and get on with life.”
Morgart underwent a double mastectomy and six rounds of chemo. She was then invited to take part in a drug trial for Kadcyla, which was approved by the FDA in May this year. Her daughter was a huge motivation for Morgart to participate in the trial.
“My daughter asked, ‘is that gonna happen to me?’” said Morgart. “So when my oncologist said ‘hey, this trial’s available and you’re perfect for it.’ I think that I signed the paperwork right there that day.”
Since the trial, Morgart has been cancer-free, and she has a new outlook. As a working mom, she finally learned how to carve out time for herself.
“As you get older, you don’t take time for yourself once you have a child. I worked, I took care of her and my husband, but I didn’t make time for me,” said Morgart. “Once I got through everything, I started doing Crossfit every day. I thought: I deserve this. I want to be strong. I want to be healthy again … I go to the gym, have girlfriends, we go out together…I found the importance of doing things for myself and making that time for myself, which I didn’t before.”
Her co-workers were uniquely supportive during her journey, which empowered her to have a career while taking care of herself.









