Dave Coulier, who played Uncle Joey on โ€œFull House,โ€ poses on the pink carpet at '90s Con in Daytona Beach, Saturday, Sept. 14, 2024.

“Full House” Star Dave Coulier Shares Shocking New Cancer Diagnosis After Beating Lymphoma

Just months after celebrating remission from a serious blood cancer, beloved actor and comedian Dave Coulier revealed a startling new health challenge. The former โ€œFull Houseโ€ star has been diagnosed with a different form of cancer โ€” one that he says came as a complete shock.

From Lymphoma Victory to a New Diagnosis

In October 2024, Dave Coulier disclosed he had been diagnosed with stageโ€ฏ3 Nonโ€‘Hodgkin lymphoma after swelling in his groin turned out to be a rapidly growing Bโ€‘cell tumor. In an article with ABC7 News, โ€œCoulier shared the news Wednesday during an interview on ‘Today.’…Coulier said he has ‘B cell lymphoma,’ which he described as ‘aggressive.'”

He underwent a rigorous course of chemotherapy, during which he shaved his head and described the experience as โ€œa rollercoaster rideโ€ of surgeries, treatments, and emotional highs and lows. By late March 2025, the good news arrived: Coulierโ€™s representatives confirmed he was officially cancerโ€‘free. โ€œOne of the few times in my life when โ€˜zeroโ€™ has been a great number to hear,โ€ he told People magazine.

A โ€œShock to the Systemโ€ โ€” Tongue Cancer Diagnosed

However, the relief was shortโ€‘lived. During a routine follow-up PET scan this fall, doctors noticed a suspicious spot at the base of his tongue. After further testing, the 66-year-old learned in October 2025 that he has a form of head and neck cancer โ€”p16โ€‘positive squamous cell carcinoma, also described as HPVโ€‘related oropharyngeal tongue cancer.

โ€œIt is a shock to the system,โ€ Coulier admitted in a recent phone interview. โ€œTo go through chemotherapy and feel that relief of, whoa, itโ€™s gone, and then to get a test that says, well now youโ€™ve got another kind of cancer.โ€ He emphasized that this new diagnosis is totally unrelated to his previous lymphoma.

Treatment, Prognosis, and a Message of Hope

Thankfully, Dave Coulierโ€™s doctors told him that the new cancer, thanks to early detection, is โ€œvery treatable.โ€ He has begun a course of 35 radiation treatments, expected to run through the end of 2025. Coulier expressed cautious optimism: โ€œIt has a 90-plus percent curability rate,โ€ he said. He urged people to keep up with regular health checkups, screening tests, and not to ignore odd symptoms โ€” because, as he put it, early detection saved his life twice.

Despite the emotional toll on him and his wife, Coulier remains determined. โ€œIโ€™m going to get to the other side of this,โ€ he vowed.

Dave Coulier: Why His Story Matters

Dave Coulierโ€™s journey โ€” from one cancer battle to another โ€” underscores a critical truth about health: beating one disease doesnโ€™t erase the risk of another. For many, hearing about two separate diagnoses in such quick succession might prompt fear. But his openness also serves as a rallying cry for vigilance, screenings, and selfโ€‘advocacy.

His story becomes especially powerful given his platform and recognition from a generation that grew up watching him. By sharing not only his triumphs but his setbacks, Coulier is reminding people that sometimes survival isnโ€™t a oneโ€‘andโ€‘done deal โ€” but with hope, treatment, and early detection, it can be a second chance.



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