Cardinal McElroy diagnosed with ‘non-aggressive’ cancer, scheduled for surgery November 5, 2025By Gina Christian OSV News Filed Under: Bishops, Feature, News, World News Cardinal Robert W. McElroy of Washington has been diagnosed with cancer and will undergo surgery Nov. 13, the Archdiocese of Washington announced Nov. 5. In a statement, the archdiocese said the 71-year-old cardinal has “well-differentiated liposarcoma, which is a non-aggressive cancer that tends not to metastasize.” According to the Cleveland Clinic, the term “liposarcoma” covers a group “very rare cancers that begin in your fat cells,” typically originating in the arms, legs and midsection. Some 1 in 100,000 in the U.S. are affected each year by liposarcoma, which is usually found in men more than women, particularly men between the ages of 50 and 65. The Cleveland Clinic notes on its website that “well-differentiated liposarcoma” — the cells of which appear more like normal cells when examined under a microscope — along with “atypical lipoma of the extremities (arms and legs), grow slowly and aren’t life-threatening.” Because well-differentiated liposarcoma is non-aggressive, “the Cardinal’s doctors are in consensus that his prognosis is very good,” said the archdiocese. The statement noted that on the evening of Nov. 4, the cardinal “spoke with the priests of the Archdiocese about this diagnosis during their annual convocation.” According to the archdiocese, Cardinal McElroy told them, “I am at peace with this challenge and hope and believe that in God’s grace I will be Archbishop of Washington for many years to come.” He asked for the priests’ “prayers and support in these days,” adding that he planned “to resume full duties two weeks after the surgery.” This is a developing story and will be updated. Read More Bishops SSPX leader to meet Cardinal Fernández after announcing unauthorized bishop consecrations Bishops call Catholics to prayer, action amid U.S. immigration violence, rhetoric New York’s new archbishop ‘grounded’ by love of God, the poor and the people he serves U.S. bishops commemorate Black History Month: ‘Let us be faithful stewards of memory’ Lapse of last U.S.-Russia nuclear treaty ‘simply unacceptable,’ says Archbishop Coakley Traditionalist society to consecrate new bishops in July without papal mandate Copyright © 2025 OSV News Print