Cricket fanatic and MCC member, Leslie Ableson (77), was diagnosed with lung cancer 16 years ago.
“I hadn’t been feeling quite right. I had a persistent cough, a temperature and kept getting a rather strange pulsating feeling in my throat.”
He went to his GP and then paid to see a consultant have chest x-rays.
“The x-rays were inconclusive but I wasn’t convinced. It was when I coughed up blood that I knew something was up. I found the only private consultant working on the Bank Holiday weekend, and to cut a long story short, I had a CT scan and then a biopsy.”
The young consultant who delivered the news didn’t pull any punches.
“I was informed I had lung cancer and he told me, point-blank, that it was inoperable and was pointless me undergoing any treatment. It was rather brutal.”
Fortunately for Leslie, his original consultant asked him to enter a new clinical trial, which he accepted.
“I was fortunate to receive both chemotherapy and radiotherapy and it did the trick. I was totally positive about my lung cancer. I knew I had to take the bull by the horns and get on with it.”
That year (1993) was a big year for Leslie for more than one reason.
“It was the year Middlesex won the County Championship at Lord’s. It was a tremendous boost. Cricket and that clinical trial saved my life.” |