Anne Diamond reveals she is being treated for breast cancer

GB News presenter Anne Diamond says she is suffering from breast cancer.

In a moving interview with Dan Wootton the legendary broadcaster said she received the diagnosis on the same day she learned she was to receive an OBE.

Anne, 68, has been off air for almost six months and has undergone a double mastectomy.

But Anne will return to GB News on Saturday to host Breakfast with Stephen Dixon.

Speaking to GB News she told Dan Wootton: “I haven’t been on a world cruise, which is what I know social media has been saying, ‘oh, she’s gone on one of her cruises’, because I’m well known now for loving cruises. It hasn’t been a world cruise.

“It’s been a fight against breast cancer. That’s what it’s been. It’s been a long journey. And five months later, I’m still not at the end of the journey, but I’m through it enough to come back to work.”

Anne learned the devastating news on the same morning saying she was told via email that she had been awarded her an OBE for her campaigning on cot deaths.

Anne said: “It was a wonderful moment and that was like 9.30 in the morning. But I knew then, because I’d already seen my GP, that I had to go to a breast cancer screening thing later in the morning. I thought I would just go for a mammogram, and a couple of tests and I’d be free in an hour.

“I spent the entire morning at my local hospital where they did everything, biopsies, X-rays, CT scans, a couple of mammograms, everything, and by lunchtime I was still there. And a lovely lady came with a lanyard around her neck that said MacMillan Cancer Care and I knew then it was serious.”

She added: “I don’t have any advice for people because I’m still going through it. But I’m well enough to return to work. I had the full works, the full mastectomy. God, this is the first time I’ve talked about it, so it’s quite difficult but I’ve had the full works. The first operation I had was nine hours long.

“I don’t remember it. I was in and out like that, but nine hours of removal and rebuild, that took a lot of getting over and then I had an operation later where they took out lymph nodes as well, just to make sure they can trace the travel, if the cancer has travelled at all to the rest of the body. Luckily I don’t think it did.

“I’ve had a load of radiotherapy, which I found very hard too. So it’s been a journey, but I’m not pretending for a minute that I am extraordinary, because I am fully aware that a quarter of women in this country are going through what I’ve just gone through and I don’t have any advice to give. I only have empathy.”

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