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Mum will receive 100th treatment for breast cancer - eight years after original diagnosis

A woman who was diagnosed with incurable breast cancer eight years ago will receive her 100th treatment this week.

Mother-of-two Chantele Rashbrook, from Deal, did not let her diagnosis in 2012 slow her down and now arranges fitness classes, charity runs, work and family life around her chemotherapy sessions.

Chantele Rashbrook was first diagnosed with cancer eight years ago
Chantele Rashbrook was first diagnosed with cancer eight years ago

She receives treatment every three weeks at the Viking Day Unit at the Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother Hospital in Margate, as part of her ongoing treatment for cancer.

This week, Chantele will receive her 100th treatment.

She said: "Sometimes I think my children forget I have cancer, and there are times when I have to remind them.

"It’s just part of life now; something I just do.

"I have treatment every third Thursday and feel a bit under the weather on the Friday and Saturday, and I do have some side effects, like my toes and fingertips are a bit numb and my tongue is quite sore and sensitive so I can’t eat certain foods.

Chantele at the Clifftop Challenge 2019 in aid of Breast Cancer Now. Picture: Alan Langley
Chantele at the Clifftop Challenge 2019 in aid of Breast Cancer Now. Picture: Alan Langley

"But when I think about the alternative, it’s nothing. It doesn’t stop me from doing anything I want to do.”

Cleaner Chantele, 49, was first diagnosed in 2012 and had a mastectomy, followed by chemotherapy, radiotherapy and then reconstructive surgery.

But the cancer returned in 2014 and had spread to her lymph nodes and lung.

She said: "When I was first diagnosed it was a real shock.

"I was at my fittest and it was just unbelievable.

Chantele with her family
Chantele with her family

"When I found another lump in my neck two years later I thought it must just be a raised gland. Even the breast care nurses thought it couldn’t be anything, because I had recovered so well.

"But it turned out to be the cancer, and this time they said it was incurable.

"That’s a hard word to hear but thanks to the research and new drug treatments there is a lot they can do to treat it, and to keep the tumours as small as possible.

"After five rounds of a different drug I was able to start on Kadcyla and I will have my 100th treatment this week.

"I’ll be on it forever unless it stops working - and then they will just find another drug that will work."

Thanks to Kadcyla, Chantele’s tumours shrank significantly and she now has scans every four months to make sure they are not regrowing.

In the years following her diagnosis, she has set up a breast cancer support group, as well as a running group, and completed a marathon, half marathon and many other running challenges - raising thousands of pounds for charity.

"I try to inspire others going through cancer," she said.

'There was a time that I couldn’t think ahead because the demons would creep in, but I don’t think like that any more...'

"I am a very positive person and I think that makes a huge difference with recovery.

"There was a time that I couldn’t think ahead because the demons would creep in, but I don’t think like that any more.

"I just live my life and don’t let it bother me.

"I did have a scare last year with a lump but it was checked and it wasn’t anything to worry about.

"I was seen very quickly and I can’t fault the care I have received.”

Chantele’s treatment has continued during the coronavirus pandemic, and she followed government advice to shield at home when the virus was at its peak.

She said: "The treatment hasn’t felt any different, apart from the fact that we’re all wearing masks and we have our temperatures taken.

"The girls there are amazing and I feel very safe. I am part of the furniture there after so long, and everyone really is fantastic with the care they give."

For more information on breast cancer support groups in east Kent, visit here.

Read more: All the latest news from Deal

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