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Border Blunder: Cancer Test Denied Due to Postcode
16 Jun
Summary
- Patient denied genetic test for secondary cancer due to postcode.
- England offered test for triple negative breast cancer patients under 50.
- Patient's survival chances for ovarian cancer are statistically 35%.

Heather Morgan, a 59-year-old from Monmouthshire, believes her postcode eight miles west of the English border significantly impacted her cancer care. In 2014, patients in England under 50 with triple negative breast cancer were routinely offered genetic testing. However, this protocol was not in place in Wales at that time. Morgan, who had been diagnosed with breast cancer 12 years prior, was not offered the test.
This genetic testing would have revealed a high risk for ovarian cancer, prompting Morgan to have her ovaries removed preemptively. It was not until 2021 that a lump led to her ovarian cancer diagnosis, and she subsequently learned she carried the BRCA1 gene mutation. She expressed frustration, stating that had she been tested in 2014, her life would have been irrevocably changed for the better, with estimated 10-year survival chances now at 35%. The Welsh government acknowledged such issues, appointing a minister for public health and emphasizing early detection in its cancer plan.