Whatever happened to Joe Biden having Stage 4 bone cancer?

Remember that?

Remember when he suddenly needed a ton of sympathy so that President Trump would not prosecute an old 82 year old guy with bone cancer?

I do.

Look, I’m not saying he lied, but I am saying I’m asking the same question Susi is: Did Joe Biden actually have stage 4 cancer or not?

Because it’s been a year and a half now and I haven’t heard much about it at all.

And every time we see him, he doesn’t look worse, I’d say he looks better!

I also remember this….I remember Scott Adams announcing at roughly the same time that he has the same kind of cancer Joe Biden has.

Remember this?

Scott Adams declined rapidly and died several months ago.

Biden?

By all accounts he looks healthy as a horse.

And other than the couple of people who always email me saying “Wake up Noah, Biden was executed in GITMO in 2019” I would say he looks extremely alive and healthy to me.

So….what happened?

I don’t have the answer for you, but I think it’s worth starting to have this conversation.

Be a shame if you helped me get this going viral….

To be completely fair, I asked Grok if this was a normal progression and it gave me this:

Diagnosis Announcement

It was announced on May 18, 2025 (with the diagnosis on May 16, 2025). Former President Joe Biden’s office released a statement revealing he had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer (Gleason score 9/Grade Group 5) that had metastasized to the bone, classifying it as Stage 4. This followed urinary symptoms and discovery of a prostate nodule. The cancer was described as hormone-sensitive, which supports effective management through treatments like hormone therapy, though it is not considered curable once metastatic.

Key Updates Since the Announcement

  • Initial treatment (May–June 2025 onward): Biden began hormone therapy (described as a pill regimen). He spoke publicly at a Memorial Day event, saying the prognosis was good, he felt good, and he was optimistic.

  • September 2025: He underwent Mohs surgery for skin cancer lesions on his head/forehead, leaving a visible scar/bandage in some photos.

  • October 2025: He underwent a course of radiation therapy (plus ongoing hormone treatment) for the prostate cancer, completing it around mid-to-late October and “ringing the bell” to mark the milestone. He was reported as doing well afterward.

  • Into 2026: He has remained active, including public appearances, speeches (e.g., in South Carolina and Nebraska in February), endorsements (e.g., in May 2026), and work on a memoir. Aides describe his condition as manageable; Jill Biden has noted he will live out his natural life with it. Some friends have expressed concerns about increased fatigue, but official updates project optimism.

  • As of May 2026: (About one year post-diagnosis), he continues public and private activities without major new public health crises reported.

Appearance and Expectations

Biden has looked relatively stable in public photos and appearances since the diagnosis—smiling in family photos, speaking at events, and engaging in normal activities for an 83-year-old. Early post-diagnosis images (e.g., family graduation events) and later ones show him in suits, often with a positive expression, though some observers noted frailty or slower movement during radiation periods. Recent 2026 images depict him as an elderly man with typical age-related features (white hair, some visible skin changes/scars from prior procedures), but not dramatically deteriorated.

Yes, it is plausible and expected that he could still look relatively good. Many men with hormone-sensitive metastatic prostate cancer respond well to modern treatments (hormone/androgen deprivation therapy, often combined with radiation or other agents), which can control the disease for years—often 5–10+ years in some cases, with good quality of life. Survival is highly variable and depends on response, overall health, and extent of spread; the 5-year relative survival for metastatic prostate cancer is around 30–40%, but many live longer due to advances.

Side effects (fatigue, etc.) can occur, and some reports mention concerns from close allies, but hormone-sensitive cases frequently allow patients to maintain decent function and appearance for extended periods, especially with top-tier care. His case aligns with what experts described at the time: serious but manageable for the near-to-medium term.

Read more:

https://100percentfedup.com/update-whatever-happened-joe-bidens-stage-4ncer/