Bay of Plenty Times

Cancer battle

Nurse fights ‘silent killer’ that has ‘no specific screening test'

- Michaela Pointon

Since Tauranga nurse Sharon Fenwick learned she has advanced ovarian cancer she has endured a hysterecto­my and surgery to remove her uterus, spleen, appendix, some lymph nodes and chest wall.

Eight months off work to recover and months of “nasty” chemothera­py followed, including a clinical trial she just learnt was unsuccessf­ul.

The 57-year-old, facing a prognosis of three to seven years to live, is telling her story for ovarian cancer month to raise awareness of the symptoms and the need for investment in research to develop a reliable routine screening test that could lead to earlier detections.

“There is no specific screening test at the minute to diagnose ovarian cancer,” Fenwick said.

According to the Ovarian Cancer Foundation, one woman is diagnosed every day in New Zealand, and more women die from ovarian cancer than all other gynaecolog­ical cancers combined. Routine screening was not recommende­d given there was “no effective screening test” and it would lift the risk of people having unnecessar­y surgery “without significan­tly reducing the risk of death”.

However, the developmen­t of new blood tests and improving access to ultrasound­s for women with symptoms could help improve diagnostic numbers.

‘It was a shock’

In February 2022 Fenwick started having “abdominal pain on and off” and noticed after lunch her “work pants were tight around my belly” even when she had not eaten much.

Being bloated or feeling full without eating or eating minimal food is a symptom of ovarian cancer.

In May 2022 Fenwick went to the emergency department after discoverin­g a lump in her lower right abdomen. She said doctors advised her to “go home and monitor” the lump.

The registered nurse of 36 years decided to take matters into her own hands, asking her GP for a referral. “I paid for a private vaginal ultrasound and that’s when they picked up the [cancer] mass.”

Before she could see a gynaecolog­ist she was back in the emergency department with “more pain”.

“They took the right blood [tests] and did a CT scan as well. Then they could see it was cancer.”

The next day she was diagnosed with stage 4b ovarian cancer – “the worst possible grading that you can probably get”.

Her first reaction was “shock”. “Here I am a nurse … it was a shock

Here I am a nurse . . . it was a shock because I’ve always been fit and well.

Sharon Fenwick

because I’ve always been fit and well.”

She said telling her three children, family and friends was difficult. “Everyone was shocked [and] scared,” she said.

The next week, Fenwick had an MRI scan and was sent to Auckland’s Greenlane Hospital for preassessm­ent and surgery.

The planned three-hour hysterecto­my turned into a “bigger” fivehour surgery as the cancer had spread to her spleen, appendix, some lymph nodes and chest wall, resulting in a collapsed lung.

After a spell in intensive care, she needed eight months off work to recover – a tough time financiall­y for the divorcee still having to cover her mortgage.

Fenwick said she had been undergoing a chemothera­py clinical trial every two weeks since June but had found out last week it was unsuccessf­ul – the cancer was still in some lymph nodes.

“We’re monitoring that for growth and my markers are climbing again.”

She said ovarian cancer was known as the “silent killer” and understood it was not “usually “diagnosed until the cancer is well and truly developed”.

She hoped a routine early detection test would be developed that would allow women to live years longer.

Learn the symptoms of ovarian cancer

A foundation spokespers­on said it was a common misconcept­ion general cervical screening tests checked for ovarian cancer.

It was more “challengin­g” to develop a screening test for ovarian cancer as “ovaries can only be accessed with surgery” and it developed much faster than cervical cancer.

“Researcher­s in NZ and overseas are working to develop better tests and treatments for ovarian cancer so we hope things will improve in the future.”

The diagnosis process included CA-125 blood tests that check for elevated levels of a specific protein, pelvic examinatio­n, transvagin­al ultrasound and CT scans. Like many cancers, an “official” diagnosis required surgery. foundation general manager Whitney Gernhoefer said it was “so important every New Zealander knows the symptoms of ovarian cancer”.

“Symptoms are often mistaken for other common issues women experience, so ovarian cancer is sometimes overlooked,” Gernhoefer said.

Her messages to women were to “know your body” and that “you are the best advocate”.

“If you feel your medical concerns

 ?? Photo / Alex Cairns ?? Tauranga woman Sharon Fenwick was diagnosed with stage 4b ovarian cancer but it was caught too late.
Photo / Alex Cairns Tauranga woman Sharon Fenwick was diagnosed with stage 4b ovarian cancer but it was caught too late.
 ?? ?? Malcolm Mulholland
Malcolm Mulholland
 ?? ?? Whitney Gernhoefer
Whitney Gernhoefer

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