The announcement in a New York Times column printed on Tuesday
came nearly two years after the rights campaigner and mother-of-six
had a double mastectomy after hearing she had also inherited a high
risk of breast cancer.
Jolie, 39, said she had gone public with her decision to tell other
women about the options available to them.
"I feel feminine, and grounded in the choices I am making for myself
and my family. I know my children will never have to say, 'Mom died
of ovarian cancer,'" Jolie wrote.
The procedure had triggered menopause, she added. "I will not be
able to have any more children, and I expect some physical changes.
But I feel at ease with whatever will come, not because I am strong
but because this is a part of life. It is nothing to be feared."
Jolie, who also lost her aunt and grandmother to cancer, underwent
the laparoscopic bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy last week after
blood tests revealed possible indicators of early cancer.
She said doctors had told her she had a 50 percent risk of ovarian
cancer due to an inherited genetic mutation.
Husband Brad Pitt flew to her side from France hours after she told
him about the test, she wrote. "The beautiful thing about such
moments in life is that there is so much clarity. You know what you
live for and what matters. It is polarizing, and it is peaceful,"
she added.
Jolie, who won an Oscar as best supporting actress in the 1999 film
"Girl, Interrupted" based her earlier decision to undergo a double
mastectomy on news that she had an 87 percent risk of breast cancer.
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Her announcement of that decision in a New York Times op-ed in May
2013 was widely lauded by celebrities, cancer survivors and medical
professionals for its openness.
She wrote in Tuesday's article, titled "Diary of a Surgery," that no
signs of cancer were discovered in removed tissue and that she had
has a progesterone IUD inserted to help maintain hormonal balance
and help prevent uterine cancer.
"It is not possible to remove all risk, and the fact is I remain
prone to cancer," she said.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says about
20,000 women get ovarian cancer and about 14,500 die from it every
year in the United States.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Andrew
Heavens)
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