The former US President Joe Biden, who was diagnosed last May with an aggressive prostate cancer, recently underwent an operation to remove cancerous skin cells, according to NBC News, citing a spokesperson for the former occupant of the White House between 2021 and 2025.
Biden, 82, would have undergone a Mosh surgery intervention, a technique used in the most frequent skin cancers, NBC News assured, and added that the exact date of the operation is unknown.
However, the American media reported that the former president was photographed last month leaving a church in the state of Delaware, and that he already had a visible incision on his head at that time.
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The also former senator and former vice president, born in 1942 into a Catholic family of Irish origin in the mining city of Scranton (Pennsylvania), was diagnosed last May with "aggressive" prostate cancer with bone metastasis, and at the end of the same month he began treatment with good expectations. In February 2023, Biden had a cancerous lesion removed from his chest in a successful operation. Before assuming the office of President of the United States, he also had several non-melanoma cancerous skin lesions removed.






