Tatiana Schlossberg, an environmental journalist and the daughter of Caroline Kennedy, has died at the age of 35 following a highly public battle with terminal cancer. Schlossberg, the granddaughter of former U.S. President John F. Kennedy, had openly shared her medical journey after being diagnosed with a rare and aggressive form of leukemia shortly after giving birth to her second child.
According to her own accounts, Schlossberg received her diagnosis in May 2024 at Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital in New York—just hours after delivering her baby. What initially appeared to be a postpartum complication quickly escalated when doctors identified severe abnormalities in her bloodwork. Further testing revealed acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with a rare genetic mutation known as Inversion 3, a form of the disease more commonly found in older patients.
Schlossberg described the diagnosis as especially shocking, noting that she had felt healthy and active prior to giving birth. Her treatment involved multiple rounds of intensive chemotherapy, followed by two bone marrow transplants. The first transplant used stem cells donated by her sister, while the second came from an unrelated donor. She also took part in experimental treatments, including CAR-T cell therapy, as physicians pursued every available option.
Throughout her illness, Schlossberg continued to write when her health allowed. In deeply personal reflections, she spoke about motherhood, illness, and the emotional toll of prolonged hospital stays. One of her greatest fears, she shared, was that her young children might not remember her due to the physical separation required during treatment to prevent infection.
An accomplished writer, Schlossberg was the author of Inconspicuous Consumption and remained committed to environmental issues and storytelling even during her illness. She emphasized that while cancer profoundly shaped her final years, she did not want it to define her entire identity.
Her death marks a tragic loss for her family and for those who followed her work and writing, which offered an unfiltered look at life, illness, and resilience.