Best of times, worst of times: Montreal clinic cares for pregnant women with cancer
MONTREAL — On May 15, 2024, Habalet Andrée Loblegnon learned she was pregnant for the fourth time. Two weeks later, she was diagnosed with stage three breast cancer.
She had noticed a lump under her right armpit during her third pregnancy, but her doctor said at the time there was no cause for concern. It wasn’t until the 41-year-old’s fourth pregnancy that she received the diagnosis — and was immediately faced with a pressing question.
Her decision was without hesitation: she would carry the baby to term, even though it meant undergoing chemotherapy while pregnant. When she returned home from the doctor to her husband and three children, she said she broke down.
Loblegnon’s situation is rare — less than 0.1 per cent of pregnant women in Canada receive a cancer diagnosis — and requires a highly specialized approach to maintain the health of both mother and baby, says Claude-Émilie Jacob, an obstetrician-gynecologist at the Montreal hospital centre known as the CHUM.

