Olympic Ice Skater Scott Hamilton’s Brain Tumor Has Grown — His Wife & 4 Kids by His Side

Olympic gold medalist Scott Hamilton decided to “get strong” after learning that a pituitary tumor in his brain had returned for the third time. Having fought the disease for years, he is opting out of treatment.

Scott Hamilton is a famous figure skater, having won four world championship titles and an Olympic gold medal in 1984. Sports challenges are not the only ones he has had to overcome. The skater has been fighting an on-and-off battle with cancer since 1997.

Scott Hamilton, 2017 | Source: Getty Images

Scott Hamilton, 2017 | Source: Getty Images

In a recent interview, the figure skater revealed his decision not to pursue treatment after the tumor returned and the reason behind it.

“It had grown,” said Hamilton, “in my spirit, in my inner being, I realized I’m totally at peace with not even looking at it again unless I become symptomatic.”

Scott Hamilton, 2016 | Source: Getty Images

Scott Hamilton, 2016 | Source: Getty Images

Hamilton first faced testicular cancer in 1997 and recovered after chemotherapy and surgery. His first brain cancer diagnosis came in 2004, and it returned in 2010. The treatment became a complicated ordeal when it took nine surgeries to repair a nicked artery in his brain.

He didn’t want a repeat of that experience after being informed the pituitary tumor had returned for a third time in 2016. So, Hamilton decided to “go home and get strong,” which initially brought good news during check-ups.

Scott Hamilton and Tracie Hamilton, 2017 | Source: Getty Images

Scott Hamilton and Tracie Hamilton, 2017 | Source: Getty Images

“I went back to the scan three months later, and they said it hadn’t grown. I go back three months later, and they say it shrank 45%. I said to my surgeon, ‘Can you explain this?’ And he said, ‘God.’ I went back in, and it shrunk 25% again,” he explained.

The next check-up had less favorable results, as he added, “It had grown, and then COVID hit, and going into any kind of hospital situation was almost impossible. So in my spirit, in my inner being, I realized I’m totally at peace with not even looking at it again unless I become symptomatic.”