Irish Independent

‘I am still in shock’

■ HSE confirms just 1,482 cancer cases were reviewed out of a total of 3,000

- Kevin Doyle, Eilish O’Regan, Breda Heffernan and Ryan Nugent

Mother-of-five Emma Mhic Mhathúna, who has helped to raise awareness about the HPV vaccine, has told how she is still in shock after she got a call revealing her cervical cancer diagnosis was delayed by three years.

AS MANY as 1,500 more women are at risk of being dragged into the continuall­y escalating cervical cancer scandal.

The HSE confirmed that there were 3,000 cases of cervical cancer notified in the last 10 years to the National Cancer Registry – but just 1,482 of these cases were reviewed by the national screening programme.

The other 1,500 will now have to be investigat­ed to find out if the women had a smear test and wrongly got the all-clear.

Sources told the Irish Independen­t there was a “genuine fear” in medical circles that dozens of these women were now likely to discover they were the victims of a delayed diagnosis like Vicky Phelan.

In what has been described as a “bombshell”, Health Minister Simon Harris revealed in the Dáil that a “potentiall­y considerab­le number of cases” where women developed cancer were not subjected to an audit.

It was believed that all existing smear tests were re-examined as a matter of practice if a woman was later diagnosed with cervical cancer.

However, the Serious Incident Management Team (SIMT) sent into CervicalCh­eck since Ms Phelan settled her case has discovered that not all cases were examined. Mr Harris said he did not have “specific figures” but agreed with Fianna Fáil’s Stephen Donnelly that it could be in the region of 1,500.

Records from CervicalCh­eck show that 1,482 cases were reviewed since 2008. Of these, 208 were shown to have “false negatives”.

The HSE last night told the Irish Independen­t that the senior management team sent in to examine CervicalCh­eck files in recent days was “working with the National Cancer Registry to see if any other women who have had cervical cancer should be included in the audit of historical screening tests, and anyone affected by this will be also be contacted”.

The team said: “Women who have had normal screening results do not clinically require an urgent screening test.”

The minister revealed: “While I had previously been advised and it had been commonly understood that the CervicalCh­eck clinical audit covered all cases notified by the National Cancer Registry, I have been informed this afternoon that this is not the case.

“These are not new cases of cancer. Nor is it a group of women wondering if they have cancer. These are women who have already been diagnosed with cervical cancer and treated as such but their cases have not been included in a clinical audit.”

Labour Party health spokesman Alan Kelly said: “This is a bombshell. What volume of women have not had their cases audited?”

Meanwhile, a mother of five has spoken out after she was told her cervical cancer diagnosis was delayed by three years after she was given incorrect results for her smear test.

Emma Mhic Mhathúna (37) said she’s still in shock following the phone call from her doctor on Sunday. To add to her worries, she is currently awaiting biopsy results to find out if her cancer has returned.

Speaking to ‘An Saol ó Dheas’ on RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta, she said: “Everything is up in the air now. Last Sunday, my doctor in Dublin called. He said that he hoped I was reading the stories in the paper about CervicalCh­eck. He said he didn’t have all my files in front of him, but that I was one of the women involved.

“The doctor told me that the smear results I got in 2013 were wrong... the first indication­s of cancer, the cells changing in the body, were there.

“If I had got the right results at that time, I wouldn’t be where I am now... I had a kidney infection in January, I have a lung infection now.

“My life... well, I’m not too worried about my life, but the kids are very, very young.

“My head is spinning. I’m still going round in shock, is it true?”

Ms Mhic Mhathúna said she had smear tests every three years since the birth of her daughter Natasha, who is now 15. All the results came back as normal until 2016.

“On September 20, 2016, I got a biopsy done, but the doctor said to me straight out there and then that he didn’t need to wait to get the test results back, ‘you have cancer and we need to act quickly, I’m ordering an MRI for you’. That was Wednesday and on Monday I got the MRI and the doctor told me I had stage 2B cervical cancer.”

She was perplexed as to how developed the cancer was, given her test results three years earlier. “I was saying to myself, how did things get so bad... and

‘‘ ‘I was saying to myself, how did things get so bad... I had the letter from a test in 2013 to say all was fine’

I had the letter from [the smear in] 2013 to say everything was fine,” she said.

Ms Mhic Mhathúna was treated at St Luke’s Hospital in Dublin. Since she and her family moved to Kerry six months ago, she has been under the care of doctors at University College Hospital Cork. “On April 15, a fortnight ago, I knew there was something wrong with my body again. I went to the doctor and he found something that was more than 1cm there.

“I was at the hospital last week and had to get a biopsy done yesterday. Séamus [her son] is making his Confirmati­on next Tuesday and I’m very worried about everything, so I asked the church and the school if Mario [another son] can make his Confirmati­on as well. He’s in fourth class. It’s good for me that they can both do it together.”

Meanwhile, Ms Phelan has said she had been invited to meet with Taoiseach Leo Varadkar.

“The Taoiseach has offered to meet with me privately, so I said yes in principle, but at the moment I’m trying to concentrat­e on my health and I have a lot of treatments coming up this week, so I told him I’d get back to him,” Ms Phelan said.

Ms Phelan encouraged women to continue to go for smear tests, saying some side-effects to the treatment of the cancer result in women being unable to have children. “It’s a horrible cancer to get from the point of view of the side-effects after treatment, for younger women in particular,” she said.

“I’m lucky I have my two children but I have met women along the way who are not able to have children as a result. I really don’t want women to have go through all of that so I would really encourage women to continue going for smears.”

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SEE PAGES 2&3
 ??  ?? Mother-of-five Emma Mhic Mhathúna is one of the women who had a ‘false negative’ smear test
Mother-of-five Emma Mhic Mhathúna is one of the women who had a ‘false negative’ smear test

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