A law graduate had to have her breast removed due to cancer after doctors told her she was ‘too young’ to have the disease.
Alicia Mcgoogan, from Manchester, started suffering from pain in her right breast in December 2021, which she first put down to a sign of her period.
After it started to leak a yellow and sticky discharge, the 24-year-old was prescribed antibiotics following a phone appointment with her GP.
But when her symptoms didn’t improve, she was referred to hospital, where scans revealed she had a blocked milk duct, which was removed through surgery.
When her pain still persisted and a golf ball-sized lump developed, she pushed for more scans. Doctors finally performed a biopsy which confirmed that she had stage two breast cancer.
Ms Mcgoogan, who has left her job as a legal recruiter on sick leave, said the delay meant the cancer had four months to grow to 8mm before it was removed.
She is urging others with possible breast cancer symptoms not to let them be ‘brushed under the carpet’ if they’re dismissed by doctors purely due to their age.
Alicia Mcgoogan (pictured), from Manchester, started suffering from pain in her right breast in December 2021, which she first put down to a sign of her period
After it started to leak a yellow and sticky discharge, the 24-year-old was prescribed antibiotics following a phone appointment with her GP
Ms Mcgoogan started to feel discomfort in her right breast in December 2021, which she compared to breast pain commonly experienced during periods, which can feel dull, heavy and aching.
‘I didn’t think much of it at first, and got on with normal life,’ she said.
But when she spotted yellow discharge leaking from her right nipple while she was in the bath, she knew there was ‘definitely something going on’ that ‘wasn’t normal’ and needed to be checked out.
Ms Mcgoogan said she called her GP, who concluded after a virtual appointment that it could be an infection in her milk duct and prescribed her a course of antibiotics.
She said: ‘I had them and still nothing had changed.
‘I was still getting this discharge and the pain was slowly increasing to the point where I was taking painkillers regularly throughout the day.
‘With the discharge, I felt like a breastfeeding mother to be honest. I had to wear breastfeeding covers. It was very sticky and stained everything.’
Ms Mcgoogan said she contacted her GP practice again as her antibiotics weren’t improving her symptoms and this time received a face-to-face appointment.
As blood was discovered in her discharge, she was transferred to the breast clinic at Burnley General Teaching Hospital.
Scans at the hospital revealed that one of her milk ducts was blocked.
She underwent a microdochectomy — a procedure to remove one or more milk ducts — in January 2022.
Results revealed Ms Mcgoogan had atypical cells — which were not cancerous — so she thought she was in the all-clear.
She said: ‘The doctors said plenty of times that I was probably too young to have breast cancer.
‘They kind of said “don’t worry, you’re very young, it’s highly highly unlikely for it to be breast cancer”.’
But she was still suffering from worsening breast pain and could feel a large lump, which appeared over the course of a few weeks that was ‘getting big quite quickly’.
She said: ‘The lump started off maybe the size of a golf ball, it was more inside the breast rather than on the surface, so it was like just the top of a golf ball, not the whole thing.
‘When I went for a check-up appointment after the microdochectomy, I said to the nurse that I had this lump in my breast and wasn’t sure if it was related to my diagnosis.
‘She didn’t check my breast at all, she didn’t even touch it and just said it was scar tissue, and that was that.’
But in a subsequent mammogram appointment in April 2022 after Ms Mcgoogan pushed for more scans, a nurse spotted the lump and said that she would need a biopsy.
But when her symptoms didn’t improve, she was referred to hospital, where scans revealed she had a blocked milk duct, which was removed through surgery
When her pain still persisted and a golf ball-sized lump developed, she pushed for more scans. Doctors finally performed a biopsy which confirmed that she had stage two breast cancer
Ms Mcgoogan, who has left her job as a legal recruited on sick leave, said the delay meant the cancer had four months to grow to 8mm by the time it was removed
Ms Mcgoogan underwent the procedure that month, which takes a small sample of body tissue so it can be examined under a microscope.
At a follow-up appointment on May 18, Ms Mcgoogan was told that results showed she had stage two breast cancer.
This means the cancer is growing but contained to the breast or it has only extended to the nearby lymph nodes.
Around 55,900 breast cancer cases are diagnosed in the UK every year, while 264,000 are detected in the US.
Nine in 10 of those with stage two are alive five years after their cancer is spotted.
Ms Mcgoogan said: ‘I just knew something wasn’t right and I geared myself up to hear those words.
‘I prepared myself for the worst and hopefully then it’s not as much of an impact when I do hear.
‘My mum was in bits and that’s been one of the hardest things for me — watching the impact of the diagnosis on my family and just seeing how they’ve been affected by it all.
‘I was in too much of a shock, I didn’t cry at all. I was more thinking “right ok, what do we do now then, what’s the next step?”‘
She added: ‘I’m a size 34C, so [the tumour] filled quite a large area of my breast.
‘It was quite big but it grew very quickly from the end of December when I started to feel it to when I got my mastectomy.’
She said it was over 8mm in size and had gone from the right of her breast to underneath it, meaning doctors were unable to save any part of her breast.
Ms Mcgoogan then had a full mastectomy of her right breast on May 30.
The 90-minute operation, which is conducted under general anaesthetic, involves removing all of the breast tissue and most of the skin covering it.
Ms Mcgoogan said: ‘I feel like if the cancer was caught earlier on, then the chances of me having a mastectomy would have been reduced.
‘It may have been where I would have had a lumpectomy instead, where they take the tumour out and I get to keep my breast.
‘But because of the time that it had to grow and spread to different parts of my breast, the only option was to remove the full breast.
She is urging others with possible breast cancer symptoms not to let them be ‘brushed under the carpet’ if they’re dismissed by doctors purely due to their age
She said: ‘I just want to raise awareness of if women have any symptoms of breast cancer, not to just brush it under the carpet if they’re turned away from the doctor because of their age’
She said: ‘Just keep pressing on and getting to the bottom of things and keep asking for scans and not to ignore the symptoms if they know it’s not right’
‘I do feel like if they would have caught it quicker I would have had a better chance of saving it.
‘The tumours do grow very quickly, so it’s definitely like a race against the clock.’
A fortnight later, she underwent in vitro fertilisation (IVF) to preserve her fertility ahead of chemotherapy.
The cancer treatment can impact a woman’s ability to have children, as they can permanently stop the ovaries from producing eggs.
Ms Mcgoogan also had Zoladex injections, which contains hormones called luteinising hormone blockers that can protect the ovaries.
She then underwent six cycles of chemotherapy.
Ms Mcgoogan started proton beam therapy this month, which is a type of radiotherapy.
Ms Mcgoogan plans to have breast reconstruction surgery after she’s recovered.
She said: ‘It’s been a bit of a whirlwind to be honest. I’ve left my job on sick leave, so I’ve not been working to focus on treatment, my social life has been impacted massively.
‘I just want to raise awareness of if women have any symptoms of breast cancer, not to just brush it under the carpet if they’re turned away from the doctor because of their age.
‘Just keep pressing on and getting to the bottom of things and keep asking for scans and not to ignore the symptoms if they know it’s not right.
‘I think if a 45-year-old or 50-year-old woman came into the breast clinic with the same symptoms that I had, they would have been given a mammogram straight away.
‘They didn’t with me, they did every other scan before they did a mammogram, because of my age.
‘I have a friend whose mother has just been diagnosed with breast cancer and I said to her that I just kind of treated it like a cold almost and was just really positive.
‘And thought that I’m going to get through this because I’ve got the best NHS treatment and in a year’s time I’m going be back to doing what I love and back to normal life.
‘I just think that if you have that mindset with it, you’ll get through it. It’s just staying positive.’
A spokesperson for East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust said: ‘We know every cancer diagnosis is devastating for patients and their families and everyone at East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust is working each and every day to treat cancer as quickly as possible and save lives.
‘We are sorry Alicia feels she did not get the support she needed. We would encourage her to contact us directly so we can talk to her about her concerns and look into her experience.
‘If anyone is worried about any symptoms they think could be cancer, speak to a GP urgently.
‘It’s important to remind people also that you can help to reduce your risk of cancer through maintaining a healthy lifestyle, avoiding exposure to known cancer-causing substances and taking, when offered, medicines or vaccines that can prevent cancer from developing.’
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