Mother who thought her Slimming World diet was working is diagnosed with pancreatic cancer 

A mother-of-three was left devastated when her impressive weight loss turned out to be stage two pancreatic cancer. 

Liz Oakley, 65, from East Kilbride, Scotland, felt ‘smug’ when she noticed the pounds melting after embarking on a low-fat diet in October 2017.

But, by the following December, she started feeling nauseous and her urine was unusually dark. By January 2018 her skin had yellowed, which prompted her to see a doctor.

It was then she was given the shock diagnosis – her third brush with potentially-fatal cancer.

Shock: Liz Oakley, 65, from East Kilbride, Scotland, pictured during her ‘successful’ diet

Ms Oakley, who was told if she had left it much longer it could have been too late, said: ‘I am a resilient person, but this knocked the stuffing out of me. It came from nowhere.

‘I was referred to hospital and doctors said they’d found a blockage. I have no idea how, but in that moment, I just knew. I told them, ‘It’s cancer, isn’t it?’

‘I was told I was stage two, but that if I’d waited much longer, I wouldn’t be here now. That’s how quick this disease is.’

Ms Oakley, who has three grown up children – Louise, 35, Peter, 33, and Aiden, 30 – had previously fought breast cancer in 2007 and 2012.

But, following radiotherapy and, eventually, after the second time, a mastectomy, she enjoyed years of good health until she started losing weight at the end of 2017.

She explained: ‘I had joined a slimming group a couple of months before, so I was happy, as I thought it was working very well.

‘I was actually feeling quite smug, telling people it was because I hadn’t snacked on any mince pies before Christmas as I usually would.’

Urgent: The mother-of-three - pictured here in her hospital bed - developed jaundice in January 2018 which sparked her unexpected diagnosis

Urgent: The mother-of-three – pictured here in her hospital bed – developed jaundice in January 2018 which sparked her unexpected diagnosis

WHAT IS PANCREATIC CANCER?

Pancreatic cancer is one of the most lethal forms of the disease.

Around 95 percent of people who contract it die from it.  

Joan Crawford, Patrick Swayze and Luciano Pavarotti all died of pancreatic cancer.

It is the fourth-leading killer in the United States. 

Around 10,000 people are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer each year in the UK, and 50,000 in the US.

WHAT IS THE CAUSE? 

It is caused by the abnormal and uncontrolled growth of cells in the pancreas – a large gland in the digestive system.

WHO HAS THE HIGHEST RISK?

Most cases (90 percent) are in people over the age of 55.

Around half of all new cases occur in people aged 75 or older.

One in 10 cases are attributed to genetics.

Other causes include age, smoking and other health conditions, including diabetes.

WHY IS IT SO LETHAL?

There is no screening method for pancreatic cancer. 

Pancreatic cancer typically does not show symptoms in the early stages, when it would be more manageable. 

Sufferers tend to start developing the tell-tale signs – jaundice and abdominal pain – around stage 3 or 4, when it has likely already spread to other organs.    

WHAT ARE THE TREATMENT OPTIONS? 

The only effective treatment is removal of the pancreas. 

This proves largely ineffective for those whose cancer has spread to other organs. 

In those cases, palliative care is advised to ease their pain at the end of their life.  

By the end of December, feeling nauseous and off her food, Ms Oakley, who is originally from East Kilbride, Scotland, noticed her urine was very dark. 

After her daughter noticed her strange pallor in January 2018, she knew she had to see a doctor. 

‘She asked me why I was such a yellowy/orange colour. I was wearing tinted glasses, so hadn’t actually noticed, but when I took them off, I looked like I’d been tangoed.’

Calling the NHS 111 non-emergency number, she went to Kent’s Medway Maritime Hospital, where she was immediately admitted. 

The pensioner had no idea her new-and-improved diet wasn't responsible for her weight loss 

The pensioner had no idea her new-and-improved diet wasn’t responsible for her weight loss 

Admitted: On January 6 2018, she was officially diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and referred to south London’s Kings College Hospital for surgery

Admitted: On January 6 2018, she was officially diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and referred to south London’s Kings College Hospital for surgery

Doctors sprang into action, running a series of tests and soon discovering a worrying blockage in her pancreas. 

On January 6, she was officially diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and referred to south London’s Kings College Hospital for surgery.

‘The care I received was incredible. Everything just flowed, and my appointment for surgery was made right away,’ she said. ‘Back home after my diagnosis, I did what we all do and Googled my condition. I was reading all these awful stories and poor survival rate statistics, and just didn’t want that to me be.

‘I couldn’t see much about people getting through and coming out the other side of a diagnosis. My way of coping was just to isolate myself from those statistics.’

Just 12 days after her diagnosis, Mrs Oakley went under the knife for an operation to remove her pancreas, duodenum, gall bladder and bile duct.

While she remains eternally grateful that she was seen so quickly, she was astonished by her rapid deterioration as she waited for her surgery.

‘I lost over two stone in a few weeks. I was shocked at what a frail old lady I became,’ she said. ‘But I feel so lucky to have received the care I did.

‘I want people to know that it is possible. You read about misdiagnosis and getting fobbed off, but I’m living proof that you can survive if everything’s done properly.’

Alarmed: 'I lost over two stone in a few weeks. I was shocked at what a frail old lady I became,' she said. 'But I feel so lucky to have received the care I did.'

Alarmed: ‘I lost over two stone in a few weeks. I was shocked at what a frail old lady I became,’ she said. ‘But I feel so lucky to have received the care I did.’

Family support: Ms Oakley pictured with two of her adult children, Peter, 33, and Aiden, 30 

Family support: Ms Oakley pictured with two of her adult children, Peter, 33, and Aiden, 30 

Following her surgery, Ms Oakley had six months of chemotherapy, then chemoradiotherapy – a combination treatment – to kill cancerous cells found at the margins of the area where the tumour had been surgically removed from.

Now, though, while she continues to have regular scans and meets with consultants to discuss her ongoing care, she is not having any more treatment.

Due to the precarious position of her tumour, near some blood vessels, doctors cannot guarantee the disease – not thought to be linked to her breast cancer – has gone for good but, for now, she is feeling positive.

Since her diagnosis, she has been supported by charity Pancreatic Cancer UK, and is backing their call for the government to aim for all pancreatic cancer patients to be treated within 20 days of diagnosis.

And she hopes that telling her story will raise awareness of the signs and symptoms of pancreatic cancer to look out for – like back and abdominal pain, unexplained weight loss, changes to bowel habits, jaundice, nausea and problems digesting food.

She said: ‘People know the signs of breast cancer, they know the signs of testicular, they know to see a doctor if they find a lump – but they aren’t aware of pancreatic cancer. I had no idea myself that my symptoms could be linked.

‘Pancreatic cancer is dreadful, and it takes more lives than it leaves, but not every story is doom and gloom. Here I am, a year on, doing things I never thought I would.

‘If it hits again five years down the line, that’s still five years longer than I would have got. I absolutely believe that we can beat this if more people get diagnosed quicker.’

 

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