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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
Lifestyle
Paige Oldfield & Sarah Leonard

Woman with no symptoms given devastating diagnosis after smear test

A routine smear test has saved the life of a woman who was diagnosed with cancer in 2021 despite not having symptoms.

Tania Taylor, from Rochdale, Manchester, received her letter in the post as usual last January, and booked herself in for a test. Just weeks later, her world spun upside down when she was told she had cervical cancer.

Fortunately, she was given the all-clear after doctors successfully removed most of the cancerous cells. Tania will still need to go for a colposcopy screening every six months for the next five years.

READ MORE: NHS wants public's views on cancer services in Cheshire and Merseyside

She is also on a waiting list for a hysterectomy to help prevent reoccurrence.

Now Tania, 37, who owns a hypnotherapy business, believes the routine appointment may have saved her life – and is encouraging other women to go for regular screenings. Speaking to the Manchester Evening News , she said: “I received my regular routine smear test letter, I’ve never really had any anxiety about it.

“A few days later I received a letter in the post and it was worded with a lot of medial jargon. It sounded quite serious and I just remember taking it to my fiancé and I couldn’t speak. I just let him read it and I burst into tears.

“It said I would be called in for a colposcopy and that would be within two weeks. It was a bit of a shock; I’ve always previously had letters that have said everything is fine.

Tania is encouraging other women to go for their tests (Tania Taylor)

“My colposcopy showed visible abnormal cells on my cervix. There and then they did an excision to remove them. The whole time I could see everything on a TV screen.

“I waited 10 weeks later for the results to come back. They found three tumours that were cancerous so I was booked in for another surgery to make sure there was nothing left.”

More than three-quarters of all cervical cancer diagnoses could be prevented if women regularly attended their smear tests, according to research. Women in the UK are offered cervical screenings by the NHS from the age of 25.

Tania continued. “From the smear test to being given the all-clear was five months. If I hadn’t gone for my smear test when I was meant to, then the cancer would have grown.

“A few people said my story made them go for their smear they had been putting off. It means what I’ve been through really prevents other people having to go through the same thing.”

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