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This Morning’s Deirdre Sanders gives health update after revealing cancer has returned

THIS Morning agony aunt Deidre Sanders has given a health update live on-air after revealing her cancer has returned.

Earlier this month, the much-loved ITV star, 79, told how the disease had made a comeback after two years.

a woman in a green floral shirt sits at a table
This Morning agony aunt Deidre Sanders has given a health update after revealing her cancer has returned
Rex
a man and a woman standing next to each other in a kitchen
Rex

She told This Morning anchors Ben Shephard and Cat Deeley she has got ‘everything crossed’[/caption]

a woman in a blue jacket sits at a table with her hands outstretched
Deirdre, 79, told how she has had surgery and is ‘staying optimistic’
Rex

Now The Sun’s retired agony aunt, whose iconic Dear Deidre column helped solve readers’ sex and relationship problems for more than 40 years, has given an update on Tuesday’s show.

She told This Morning hosts Cat Deeley, 47, and Ben Shephard, 49, she has got “everything crossed” after undergoing surgery.

Deirdre, 79, praised the “fantastic treatment from the NHS” and said: “I will find out if they got it all in a couple of weeks time.

“I have got everything crossed.

“I was told it was a tiny, tiny cancer so I am optimistic.”

After she wrapped her This Morning advice segment, the expert told how it was “good to be back.”

Ben then kindly wished her well and said: “Let us know when you get your results.”

CANCER BATTLE

Deirdre, who was first diagnosed with breast cancer in 2022, told of her “shock” second diagnosis earlier in October.

She told the This Morning hosts she had no symptoms and malignant cells were detected through her scheduled mammogram followed by an ultrasound scan and a biopsy.


Deidre said: “No I haven’t had symptoms, I haven’t felt run down.

“I haven’t felt tired. I hadn’t had any discomfort. If I did a self check I couldn’t feel anything because it’s so tiny there is nothing to feel.

“It’s purely down to having the mammogram that showed it.

“And then you get referred back and I had a biopsy, and then it revealed it was cancer.”

Cancer screenings in England

CATCHING cancer early gives you the best chance of survival, and a huge part of that is attending regular screenings.

NHS programmes can help diagnose the disease, or risk of it, and improve the likelihood of successful treatment.

There are three national screening programmes in England: cervical screening, breast screening and bowel screening.

“If you are eligible, please make every effort to have your screening test as they can detect a problem early, before you have any symptoms. ,” the NHS says.

“Finding out about a problem early can mean that treatment is more effective.”

Cervical screening

This is offered in England to people with a cervix aged 25 to 64 and is routinely carried out every three years up to the age of 49, and every five from 50 to 64.

Depending on the result, people may be recalled earlier.

During a cervical screening, samples are tested for high risk Human Papillomavirus (HPV), which causes nearly all cervical cancers.

Those that test positive are then analysed further.

Breast screening

Breast screenings, which involve an X-ray test called a mammogram that can spot cancers when they are too small to see or feel, are usually offered to women aged 50 to 71 in England.

But the NHS is trialling them for women under 50 if they have a high risk of developing breast cancer.

Bowel screening

This test detects whether patients are showing any early signs of cancer.

It is available to everyone aged 54 to 74, with the programme gradually expanding to those 50-plus after The Sun’s No Time 2 Lose campaign.

Currently, those aged 54 to 74 are automatically sent an at-home test kit every two years, so make sure your GP has your correct address.

The at-home test involves providing a small poo sample to be checked for tiny amounts of blood, which could be caused by cancer.

If you’re 75 or over, you can ask for a kit every two years by phoning the free bowel cancer screening helpline on 0800 707 60 60.

Source: NHS

The beloved agony aunt said she will have surgery in 10 days to remove the cancerous cells that were found in her other breast.

Breast cancer is the most common form of the disease in the UK with 56,000 cases per year and 12,000 deaths.

Deidre’s first diagnosis in 2022 came after an “error” saw her left off a list of women aged 70 who had not been invited to have their mammograms.

Speaking to The Sun at the time, she said she began “feeling achy” and realised she had a backache that “seemed to be spreading into my right breast.”

Deidre retired from The Sun in December 2020.

She has been an agony aunt on This Morning since 2016 and has also published several books.

a woman wearing a pink shirt and a silver necklace
Stewart Williams – The Sun

Deirdre was a much-loved agony aunt for The Sun for more than 40 years[/caption]

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