Yorkshire Post

Cancer sufferer joins campaign

Cancer survivor backs charity appeal

- LINDSAY PANTRY NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: lindsay.pantry@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @LindsayPan­tryYP

HEALTH: A mother from Hambleton has joined a national campaign to highlight how ground-breaking research is helping cancer sufferers like her enjoy the “normal things in life”.

SHE IS known as an “exceptiona­l survivor” for defying the odds against incurable cancer for a decade – now a mother from Hambleton has joined a national campaign to highlight how ground-breaking research is helping cancer sufferers like her enjoy the “normal things in life”.

Laura Ashurst from Stokesley has just celebrated her 50th birthday with her twin sister, the Goodnight Sweetheart actress Elizabeth Carling, something she never thought would be possible after being diagnosed an incurable form of breast cancer in 2007.

She was first treated for cancer in August 2001, aged 34, after she found a lump in her right breast. At the time her son Jack was only five months old and her daughter Megan was three.

But just three years later the cancer returned and she underwent a mastectomy and reconstruc­tive surgery. Despite being well for the subsequent three years, during treatment for back pain she discovered the cancer had spread to other areas of her body and this secondary breast cancer was no longer curable.

At just 40-years-old she was told that her prognosis was around two years. She began chemothera­py immediatel­y followed by the drug letrozole, a hormone therapy drug designed to stop or slow the growth of cancer.

“It is now 10 years since I was given that very poor prognosis, and I’ve surpassed what was ex- pected,” she said. “Every day is a bonus and I put that down to the wonders of cancer research.

“During this time I’ve been able to celebrate as my children get older and see them reach milestones in their own lives. Jack is now 16 and completed his GCSEs and Megan is 20, finished her A-Levels and is now at uni-- Last year I was even able to celebrate my 25th wedding anniversar­y with my husband Paul, who has been by my side every step of the way.

“I’m known as an exceptiona­l survivor by my medical team and as a result the months have turned into years and I’ve been able to reach one of the biggest milestones of all, my 50th birthday. I’ve achieved this monumental milestone with my twin sister Lizzie, and we were able to celebrate our 50th birthdays together, something I didn’t think would ever be possible.

“I’m currently defying statistics and the data on 10-year survival patterns, and now I’ve entered my fifth decade, I really cannot stop smiling.”

Mrs Ashurst has shared her experience to highlight Cancer Research UK’s ‘Right Now’ campaign, which is showing the positive impact of research.

Cancer Research UK funded researcher­s carried out key early work on breast cancer drugs called ‘aromatase inhibitors’, which paved the way for drugs such as letrozole, which Mrs Ashurst continues to take.

Mrs Ashurst said: “Following my diagnosis I retired from work as a beauty therapist and lecturer to focus on my family and charity work. I became a Cancer Research UK Ambassador in 2011 and support the charity anyway I can. It’s thanks to research that I’ve been able to celebrate these milestones with my family and I look forward to 2018 and enjoying all the normal everyday moments life has to offer.”

Every day is a bonus and I put that down to the wonders of research Cancer survivor Laura Ashurst, now 50 after first being diagnosed with cancer at 34.

 ?? PICTURE: RICHARD WALKER ?? LANDMARK BIRTHDAY: Stokesley mum Laura Ashurst, right, celebrates 50th birthday with twin sister, actress Elizabeth Carling, and 10 years of defying the odds against cancer.
PICTURE: RICHARD WALKER LANDMARK BIRTHDAY: Stokesley mum Laura Ashurst, right, celebrates 50th birthday with twin sister, actress Elizabeth Carling, and 10 years of defying the odds against cancer.

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