The Daily Telegraph

Eleven thousand breast cancer cases may have been missed

- By Henry Bodkin Health Correspond­ent

NEARLY 11,000 women could be living with undiagnose­d breast cancer following last year’s drive to “protect the NHS”, analysis reveals.

A reluctance to burden the health service during the pandemic’s first wave, coupled with a drop in GP referrals and suspension­s of screening programmes is wreaking a “tragic cost”, experts said. Research by the charity Breast Cancer Now found there were 10,700 fewer people diagnosed with breast cancer across the UK between March and December last year.

The team analysed a range of data to reach the figure, including the number of people starting their first treatment for breast cancer, the number of women screened each month and the length of time for which services were paused.

During the first wave of the pandemic, breast screening services were paused for different amounts of time across the UK, including around four months in Scotland and five months in Wales.

While services were not officially paused in England, Breast Cancer Now said this still happened as hospitals turned their attention to fighting Covid.

Overall, it said nearly 1.2million fewer women in the UK underwent breast screening between March and December. Meanwhile, there was a 90,000 drop in referrals to a specialist for patients with possible symptoms of breast cancer in England between March and December.

Even though services have resumed, the charity said they are operating at around 60 per cent capacity due to the need for social distancing and infection control.

The charity today warns of a forthcomin­g “perfect storm”, with health workers in imaging and diagnostic services under unpreceden­ted pressure due to the pandemic, having already been “chronicall­y under-resourced” beforehand.

Baroness Morgan, chief executive of Breast Cancer Now, said: “The tragic cost of almost 11,000 missing breast cancer diagnoses is that, in the worst cases, women could die from the disease.

Overall, it put the number of patients undiagnose­d with breast cancer due to the pandemic at around 8,900 cases in England, 890 in Scotland, 687 in Wales and 248 in Northern Ireland.

An NHS spokesman said: “While the vast majority of cancers detected through screening programmes are at a very early stage … thousands of invitation­s are being sent every month and people should book in for screening as soon as they are invited.

“If you feel a lump or any cancer symptom, please come forward and get checked.”

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