Pregnant woman has 27-pound fibroid removed at Chicago hospital: 'outlook is phenomenal'

Thursday, April 16, 2026 6:23PM CT
CHICAGO (WLS) -- A local pregnant woman came to Loretto Hospital looking for options to deal with her advanced fibroid after other doctors told her she would likely lose a pregnancy and her fertility.

Brionna Johnson was only 17 weeks pregnant, but she had an enormous growing fibroid pressing on her uterus and organs.



"That's alarming; that's scary," Johnson said.

Johnson said she, her older son and her partner were excited about the baby.



But she said several doctors told her she should terminate the pregnancy and have a hysterectomy to remove the fibroid and prevent future fibroids.

"Hysterectomy would be my best option, and I was like, 'absolutely not,'" Johnson said.

According to a 2025 meta-analysis of racial disparities in minimally invasive hysterectomy, published in the NIH PubMed Central, non-white patients were 50% less likely to receive minimally invasive surgery compared to white patients.

"She was in so much agony. Her uterus was this big, and everything else was all fibroid," said Dr. Pierre Johnson, who specializes in obstetrics and gynecology at Loretto Hospital.

Johnson met Dr. Johnson, who specializes in removing benign masses.



He removed a 27-pound fibroid through a small, low incision, without impacting her pregnancy.

"I'm starting to feel the flutters and the movement; it's just all surreal that I woke up and got new lease on life and opportunity at motherhood," Johnson said.

"Her outlook is phenomenal; she's in her second trimester of pregnancy. Now she can breathe; she can walk. She can move," Dr. Johnson said.

Dr. Johnson and patient Johnson urge other doctors to make sure they are really listening to their patients. And they urge women to find a doctor who will listen.

"There is such a disparity in how they are treated. There is a need for not only representation but also education amongst professionals to be able to give these women the care that they need," Dr. Johnson said.



"We are literally just asking for the help that anybody else would want and fairness in that as well," Johnson said.

She is due in August. And while doctors are monitoring her closely, she is expected to have a healthy rest of her pregnancy.

And her fertility is preserved.
Copyright © 2026 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.