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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
National
Dan Haygarth

Man who thought he wasn't ill had 'life saved' after appointment

A man who thought he wasn't ill had his life saved by a regulation lung scan.

Gordon Darnell, from Croxteth, attended a lung health scan despite not feeling ill at all. However, he was diagnosed with stage 1 lung cancer following his appointment.

After surgery in January, Gordon was able to go on holiday just eight weeks later. He said he was never ill, not before his diagnosis, through his treatment or now, because the scan picked up his cancer so early.

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Gordon said: “My consultant said when I went for my original lung scan, I saved my own life.

“I was never ill – not before my diagnosis, not during treatment and not now, and that’s because they picked it up so early. I almost feel like a fraud speaking to people who've got cancer or who’ve had cancer because I didn't experience anything like they did, and that’s all down to going for that lung check.

“We’re talking an hour out of your day. If you go and there’s nothing wrong, you haven’t lost anything, but if there is something wrong, you’ve got to deal with it as quickly as possible. I truly believe it has saved my life.”

NHS England's Targeted Lung Health programme invites people aged between 55 and 74 with a history of smoking to a free lung check. The check-up, which has already saved hundreds of lives across England, has been running in Liverpool, Knowsley and Halton for 18 months, but it is now being expanded to certain parts of Merseyside.

People in St Helens and south Sefton who are registered with a local GP surgery are beginning to receive their invitations. Targeting those most at risk of lung cancer, the checks have been proved to improve the earlier detection of the disease.

Around 1,200 people nationwide have been diagnosed with cancer through the programme. Three quarters of these cancers were detected at an early stage - far earlier than would have been likely without the checks.

People diagnosed with lung cancer at the earliest stage are nearly 20 times more likely to survive for five years than those whose cancer is caught late. Within the Merseyside and Cheshire region, targeted lung health checks have identified 111 lung cancers so far, of which, 68.5% were at stage 1.

This has enabled 74 people diagnosed with early-stage lung cancer to receive curative treatment.

Dr Chris Warburton, Medical Director at Cheshire & Merseyside Cancer Alliance said: “We are delighted that St Helens and south Sefton are now part of NHS England's Targeted Lung Health Check programme.

‘’We have been seeing the impact of these checks for several years now through programmes in Liverpool, Halton and Knowsley. It is wonderful that residents across St Helens and south Sefton will now have the same opportunity.

“Lung cancer can be difficult to detect early, which is why so many people are currently diagnosed when the disease has become incurable. However, as we are seeing from the existing programmes, these checks are helping us to diagnose many more people earlier, when it is far easier to treat.

“This is why we want everyone who is invited to take up the opportunity and make an appointment. The chances are you will not have any symptoms when you receive your invitation, but this should not stop you making an appointment. You should have the check whether you feel fine or not.

“The main aim of these checks is to find cancer at the earliest opportunity before there may even be any symptoms, so, just as you would go for a breast screening or send off your bowel screening kit, we now want you to have your lungs checked. For the majority of those who attend, everything will be fine, while for those who do have something wrong, catching it early can make all the difference.”

The first residents in St Helens to receive their invitations live in Parr, Bold and Sutton. It will then gradually roll out across the borough including Newton, Earlestown in March 2023, Moss Bank, Rainford, Windle, Eccleston, West Park, Thatto Heath and Rainhill in July 2023 and Haydock, Billinge and Seneley Green in December next year.

Litherland, Seaforth and Bootle will be the first areas of south Sefton to be targeted from December 14, before people in Crosby and Waterloo are invited in May next year and Maghull in September.

Those invited will have an appointment with a lung health nurse, either over the phone or face-to-face. Those then considered to have a higher risk of lung cancer will be offered a low dose CT scan in a mobile truck located within their community. This scan is far more accurate at picking up cancer than a standard X-ray.

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