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Brazil’s Lula Starts Radiation After Early-Stage Skin Cancer Diagnosis

BRASILIA/SAO PAULO, ⁠May ⁠25 (Reuters) – Brazilian President ⁠Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has ​started preventive radiation treatment after being diagnosed with ‌early-stage skin cancer, doctors ‌treating the 80-year-old leftist leader and ⁠his ⁠office said on Monday.

Lula had a basal cell ​lesion removed on April 24.

“It was decided to proceed with complementary treatment with preventive, superficial ​radiotherapy on the scalp,” doctors at the Sirio-Libanes ⁠Hospital said in ⁠a medical note, ⁠adding ​Lula will maintain his daily activities without restrictions.

A spokesperson ​for Brazil’s ⁠presidency told Reuters the “small” lesion was diagnosed as early-stage cancer and Lula would undergo 15 radiotherapy sessions to prevent further ⁠lesions.

Lula is expected to run for a fourth non-consecutive ⁠term in October and currently leads right-wing challenger Flavio Bolsonaro in several opinion polls for a potential second-round runoff.

He is Brazil’s oldest sitting president and has had some health scares, including emergency surgeries in 2024 to treat and prevent bleeding ⁠in his head. Lula was treated for throat cancer in 2011.

(Reporting by Lisandra Paraguassu in Brasilia and Gabriel Araujo in ​Sao Paulo; Writing by Isabel Teles; ​Editing by Deepa Babington)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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