Daily Mail

Five years after Marr’s devastatin­g stroke, he battles kidney tumour

- By Susie Coen TV and Radio Reporter

ANDREW Marr will have surgery to remove a malignant tumour from his kidney this week.

His latest health ordeal comes just five years after he suffered a devastatin­g stroke which left him partially paralysed.

The 58-year-old BBC journalist will step down from hosting his Sunday politics programme, The Andrew Marr Show, while he recuperate­s.

He made the news public yesterday, signing off from his BBC1 show by telling viewers: ‘I am going to be away for a couple of weeks or so ... I’m having a small hospital operation and I will be back as soon as I possibly can, so be kind please to whoever is sitting in this chair next week.’ Both the BBC and Marr’s agent have said he is expected to make a full recovery.

Kidney cancer is a common form of the disease and normally affects those over 60.

Symptoms include blood in urine, lower back pain, and a lump on the side of the body.

The risk is worse for those who are obese or have a family history of the condition, though the prognosis is good if the cancer is diagnosed early.

In January 2013, Marr had a massive stroke after pushing himself to exhaustion on a rowing machine. An operation to clear the blockage caused a more severe bleed on the brain, and he almost died twice.

‘I was out of it, I don’t remember anything about it,’ he said last year. He said doctors told his wife and three children they were sorry but he was not going to ‘make it’.

He said they later told them: ‘Good news and bad news: We think he might well make it but if he does he will basically be unable to speak and will be in a wheelchair for the rest of his life.’ But he regained consciousn­ess days later and, after months of physiother­apy and strength training, was able to re-learn how to walk.

It was thought his busy work schedule had contribute­d to his health problems. The BBC presenter had juggled writing a book, travelling the world for a documentar­y and hosting both The Andrew Marr Show and Radio 4’s Start the Week in the two years before his stroke.

Earlier this year Marr told Theresa May that it might have killed him if it had happened during the NHS winter crisis.

In a terse interview with the Prime Minister, he referred to a case of an elderly woman from Essex who was forced to wait five hours to be seen after having a stroke. He said: ‘ If I’d have been waiting for five hours before I’d seen a doctor after my stroke I would not be here talking to you.’

A BBC spokesman confirmed Marr had taken time off for treatment and said: ‘We wish him well and look forward to welcoming him back on our screens soon.’

‘I will be back as soon as I can’

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