Mark Steel: Comedian âimmensely relievedâ to be cancer-free as he praises doctors
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Comedian Mark Steel has spoken of his âimmense reliefâ of being cancer-free after being given the all-clear from doctors.
Steel, 63, shared his throat cancer diagnosis last October and told the BBC his treatment has been successful.
He shared his experiences and also praised the staff at University College London Hospital (UCLH).
âThey have been astoundingly fantastic,â Steel told BBC Radio 4âs Today programme.
Previously, Steel revealed he noticed his neck was âlooking much bigger than normalâ while shaving.
The Have I Got News For You and Mock the Week regular wrote on his website that at first, he thought it was an infection which would go away by itself.
When it didnât, he sought medical advice, âtalking in the blokey way that men often talk to a doctor, saying âIâm sure itâs nothing, Iâm sorry for comingâ.â
He was sent for a biopsy but was later told his results had been lost in transit.
Steel only discovered he had cancer when someone called to arrange another biopsy and told him it was âto see what stage of cancer you haveâ.
A consultant later told him he had throat cancer that had spread to his lymph gland. But, earlier this week Steel was given the all-clear by doctors.
âOn Tuesday morning in the most mundane fashion someone rang from the hospital â I knew they were going to ring â and they said âit is all alrightâ.
âBut of course â and I donât know why â they donât tell you straight away. So there was about five minutes of âhow are you, how have you been, what have you been up to?â
âI just stayed calm and they mundanely said it is good news.
Steel â who has a new series of Mark Steelâs in Town coming up on BBC Radio 4 â had successful rounds of chemotherapy and radiotherapy to help treat his cancer.
âI donât recommend chemotherapy or radiotherapy as recreational drugs. It is quite brutal, but you have to think this is the way they cure it â and it does.
âThere were several weeks when everything went. I had no voice at one point and I was just coughing up industrial levels of mucus. barrages of it into a little Tupperware salad bowl.â
Steel praised the facilities at UCLH which were also visited by King Charles in his first public-facing engagement since his own diagnosis.
The comedian said the chemotherapy room is âone of the most positive placesâ he has ever been to.
âYou just have to get through it,â Steel added. âIt is an immense relief and it is luck.
âIt is partially the magnificence of the health service and you have to get yourself in the right frame of mind, mostly it is luck.â
If you have been affected by any of these issues in this story you can visit BBC Action Line.
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Published10 October 2023
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