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Dad with no symptoms told he needed surgery to remove tumours

BySpotted UK

Apr 12, 2023

A dad who had no symptoms was told he needed surgery due to bowel cancer.

Steve Hollington, from Warrington, was diagnosed with stage three cancer last year after taking a simple at home test. This is known as a faecal immunochemical test which is later sent off and processed, reports CheshireLive.

Steve said the bowel cancer screening test dropped on his doorstep was like a "winning lottery ticket" after it saved his life. He's now encouraging others to be take the test, which detects small amounts of blood in feces that would not be visible.

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The dad-of-two said: "It’s a no-brainer for me. I had no symptoms, I would have carried on not knowing had I have not taken the test, and leaving it so long would have almost certainly been too late to receive the treatment I have.

“Taking the bowel screening kit has saved my life, and potentially given me 20 more years to live it.”

Shortly after returning the completed kit, the NHS contacted Steve to say further investigation was required. After a colonoscopy, two tumours were found in his bowel, which Steve said "completely took me by surprise as I didn’t have a single symptom".

He underwent surgery on his bowel in December, just weeks after his diagnosis, and was fitted with a stoma post-surgery to allow his bowel to heal. Eighteen lymph nodes were removed and Steve is halfway through a three-month course of chemotherapy.

Steve added: “There were some really worrying and emotional times, but I’ve tried to remain positive.

"I feel like I’m over the worst parts of it, the surgery has removed the tumours, the chemotherapy will hopefully mop up any of the cancerous cells and after the course has finished, hopefully I will be able to have a stoma reversal.”

Everyone aged 60 to 74 years who is registered with a GP and lives in England is automatically sent an NHS bowel cancer screening kit every two years. But the programme is also being expanded by the NHS to include people under 60.

Steve at his wedding in May 2022, with wife Sara and two boys, Ben and Jack

Around 70 per cent of people return their completed test kits, which experts fear means many may miss a diagnosis. Dr Michael Gregory, medical director for NHS England North West, urged people to complete the test and return it as soon as they receive it.

He said: “Catching bowel cancer before it spreads can reduce the risk of dying and make treatment so much more manageable.

“The FIT kit is a vital part of our screening programme, so I’d urge anyone who has received a kit but has yet to return it to not put it off.”

Steve, who performs as an Elton John tribute act, has reworked the star's classic Your Song to help raise awareness of bowel cancer screening.

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