Christina Applegate Says She’s 100 Percent Breast Cancer-Free
In an interview with ABC News' "Good Morning America", Christina Applegate said she is cancer-free. Speaking with Robin Roberts, Christina Applegate said she has been getting regular mammograms since she turned 30

"I'm clear," Christina Applegate said during the interview airing Tuesday. "Absolutely 100 percent clear and clean. It did not spread. They got everything out, so I'm definitely not going to die from breast cancer."

Earlier this month her publicist, Ame Van Iden, announced in a statement that the former “Married with Children” actress has been diagnosed with an early form of breast cancer.

The news came out soon after Christina Applegate, 36, was announced as one of several celebrities to take part in the upcoming "Stand Up To Cancer" telethon which is to be broadcasted simultaneously on US networks CBS, NBC and ABC on September 5. Meryl Streep, Jennifer Aniston and Charlize Theron are also involved in this campaign.

The actress is mostly known for her role as Kelly Bundy on the popular 80’s and 90’s Fox TV series, “Married With Children.” She made her return to television last fall on the ABC comedy “Samantha Who?” Applegate has won Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for her starring in the ABC comedy. She also won an Emmy for a guest role as Jennifer Aniston's sister on "Friends."

She also starred in movies like Jean-Marie Poiré’s “Just Visiting” (2001), “The Sweetest Thing” (2002), “Employee of the Month” (2004), “View From the top” (2003), where she met Gwyneth Paltrow. They are now good friends.

During the interview, Christina Applegate has spoken also about her reaction when first hearing the terrible diagnostic.

"I was so mad," she remembered . "I was just shaking and — and then also immediately, I had to go into ... `take-care-of-business-mode,' which was ... I asked them, `What do I do now? What — what is it that I do? I get a doctor, I get a surgeon, I get an oncologist? What do I do?'"

Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in women, lagging behind lung cancer. The disease has 5 stages, starting with 0 and ending with 4. The 0 stage describes the noninvasive stage of the disease, while in the 4th one, the disease has spread to other parts of the body as well, and is very hard to cure.