logo
Restaurant critic Giles Coren reveals prostate cancer diagnosis

Restaurant critic Giles Coren reveals prostate cancer diagnosis

Yahoo31-01-2025

Restaurant critic and journalist Giles Coren has announced his diagnosis with prostate cancer.
Writing in his column for The Times, the 55-year-old said urology nurses had taken a biopsy before informing him they had found 'some cancer' but that 'no treatment would be necessary for the moment'.
'In the very week that it was announced on the front page of The Times that prostate cancer is now the commonest cancer in England … I have been diagnosed with it!' he wrote.
#ProstateCancer has become the most common cancer in England.
However, for a disease that affects 1 in 8 men, there's still no screening programme and outdated NHS guidelines prevent lifesaving conversations with men at highest risk.
➡️ Read more: https://t.co/wvVi5jbS0P pic.twitter.com/KUh0oY1H0R
— Prostate Cancer UK (@ProstateUK) January 28, 2025
Earlier in the week charity Prostate Cancer UK said diagnoses of the disease had overtaken breast cancer in 2022 and 2023, making it England's most common cancer.
TV star and writer Coren, who is the brother of Only Connect presenter Victoria Coren Mitchell, said his 'delightful journey started a couple of years ago'.
'I had to demand, literally demand, a prostate specific antigen (PSA) test along with my annual cholesterol check, because not only is it not mandatory on the NHS but your GP is not even allowed to suggest it unless you have symptoms,' he claimed.
The NHS website says a PSA test checks the level of prostate specific antigen in your blood, with high levels indicating a potential prostate condition.
Coren said the test 'came back a bit high' and revealed he had only asked for it because of the work done by celebrities including Stephen Fry, the late Bill Turnbull – and more recently Sir Chris Hoy, who revealed his prostate cancer was terminal in 2024.
Prostate Cancer UK says 'normal' PSA levels are usually less than 3ng/ml but adds that this varies, with levels depending on factors such as age and medication use.
After his test presented a score of four Coren was sent for an MRI scan, which he said 'came back 'meh', not definitely cancer but not definitely not cancer'.
They then offered him a biopsy which he declined until his PSA level went up to seven.
After the procedure one of the urology nurses phoned him to present the results and said they had found cancer – 'but less than a millimetre in just three of the 21 samples'.
According to Coren they said 'that no treatment would be necessary for the moment. Just monitoring'.
Coren has presented on TV shows including BBC Two programme Amazing Hotels: Life Beyond The Lobby.
He also presented BBC Radio 4's Front Row for one series.
His debut novel, Winkler, won the Bad Sex In Fiction Award in 2005.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Global experts met in East London to try and fix the mental health crisis — their solutions will surprise you
Global experts met in East London to try and fix the mental health crisis — their solutions will surprise you

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Global experts met in East London to try and fix the mental health crisis — their solutions will surprise you

East London was even buzzier than usual last week. Thousands packed into venues around Shoreditch for the inaugural South by Southwest (SXSW) London, a music, tech and film festival which started life in sunny Austin, Texas. It was a broad church: Tony Blair argued we should have AI doctors and nurses to relieve pressure on the NHS, while rapper Tinie Tempah backed a scheme to get young people away from their screens and onto the dancefloor. Many of the talks led back to the mental health crisis, which has overtaken cancer and obesity to become the biggest global health concern. Industry leaders laid out their visions for alleviating the crisis, with solutions spanning tech, psychedelics and prescribed laughter. At a talk simply named 'The Mental Health Crisis', one of the leading child psychiatrists in the US, Dr Harold S Koplewicz, was unequivocal about the prime suspect. 'What happened between 2014 and 2018? We didn't change the water supply. We didn't change the telephone lines. We had social media.' Youth mental health has deteriorated with alarming speed in recent years. Analysis of NHS data by the charity Mind shows that more than 600,000 under-18s are on mental health waiting lists, with a quarter having waited for over two years for 'meaningful' care such as an appointment with a psychiatrist. Yet the challenges persist even when they get to the appointment. 'One of the few things that psychiatry doesn't have is an objective test,' said Koplewicz. 'We have lots of people who are inattentive, but they don't all have ADHD. Someone might be anxious, someone might be bored, someone might be gifted.' To that end, he and his team have invested millions of dollars in developing comprehensive evaluations for children. Tech may be the bogeyman of mental health, but Koplewicz also thinks it can be harnessed for good. He has tapped into Gen Z's obsession with journalling to develop an app called Mirror, which uses AI to summarise how users are feeling and to recognise behaviour patterns, as well as monitoring the entries. 'So far, 270 young people have been taken to the Crisis Text Line through the app, while five of them called 911,' said Koplewicz, who was keen to stress that an app like Mirror (currently only available in the US) is not a replacement for therapy, nor does he think the rising trend of AI therapy is 'the safe way to go'. Much of the attention in the mental health crisis is paid towards young people, and rightly so. But the problem spans generations. In the UK, poor mental health is now the leading cause of workplace absence, according to the Health and Safety Executive. Meanwhile, antidepressants were taken by 8.7 million people in England in 2023, with the amount of prescriptions having almost doubled since 2011. As a psychiatrist, Professor David Nutt has prescribed many patients with traditional SSRI antidepressants like Prozac. 'That's all I've got,' he told me. 'We know that they work, but they don't work very well.' While SSRIs have helped many people out of depression, experts estimate almost 30 per cent of major depressive disorders are treatment resistant. Yet Nutt insists there is a treatment: psilocybin, the compound found in magic mushrooms which is classified as a Class A drug and illegal to administer outside of clinical trials. 'A quarter, maybe a third, of people would definitely do better with psychedelics than they would with SSRIs,' he said. Nutt was fresh off a panel at SXSW London about the future of mental health and psychedelics, where he railed against the establishment view of drugs like psilocybin and LSD. 'The banning of psychedelics is the worst censorship of research and clinical therapy in the history of the world,' he said. 'There is no other example where there has been a global blockade of understanding.' Yet the results from clinical trials have been remarkable. A King's College London trial found that a 25mg dose of psilocybin had a significant impact in reducing symptoms of depression in participants with treatment-resistant depression. In 2023, Australia became the first country in the world to legalise the use of psychedelics to treat mental health conditions. Nutt hopes that the UK will follow suit. 'We should liberate them for utility, and we should do it soon please, because I'm getting old and I really want to celebrate,' he told the audience. 'If we don't, many, many, people will be condemned to a life of misery.' For those who prefer the drug-free route, another panel talk offered something more analogue: a dose of laughter. Lu Jackson founded Craic Health with the aim of providing 'comedy on prescription'. Alongside Labour MP Dr Simon Opher, Jackson is working to integrate prescribed lols into NHS policy. 'It's not the one cure, but it adds to the toolbox of things that we can look at to improve our mental ill health,' she said. Many studies have established the therapeutic benefits of laughter, so why not harness this natural serotonin booster? Jackson wants to set up workshops everywhere from GP clinics to retirement homes, where amusing folk would come along to cheer up the individual or a crowd. 'It doesn't have to be a comedian, it could be a writer, it could be a clown.' Plus, it would help jobbing comedians gain an extra income stream in an increasingly precarious industry. But what if the jokes are really bad — wouldn't that be even more depressing? Comedian and co-panellist Jonathan Pie thought not: 'I always think a bad stand-up gig is some of the best theatre.'

Should people be paid to donate blood? Yahoo readers have their say
Should people be paid to donate blood? Yahoo readers have their say

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Should people be paid to donate blood? Yahoo readers have their say

Yahoo UK's poll of the week lets you vote and indicate your strength of feeling on one of the week's hot topics. After the poll closes, we'll publish and analyse the results each Friday, giving readers the chance to see how polarising a topic has become and if their view chimes with other Yahoo UK readers. The NHS is urging people to come forward as blood donors, saying there is a "critical" need for certain blood types. On Monday this week, officials said 200,000 more donors were needed in England to maintain the blood supply. Low blood stocks prompted officials to issue an 'amber alert' over supply for hospitals last year and NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) said more must be done to avoid a 'red alert'. The blood type most in demand is the so-called universal blood type — O negative blood — needed for treatment in emergencies. There is also a need for more Black donors, who are more likely to have specific blood types that can help treat people with sickle cell disease. In our poll earlier this week, we asked Yahoo readers if they thought an incentive could attract more donors and posed the question: Should people be paid for donating blood? Two thirds of respondents to our poll (66%) thought no, blood donations should be voluntary. Some 29% thought yes, people should be paid, while a further 5% were undecided. We also asked, 'How much would prompt you to donate blood?' The vast majority of respondents (70%) said they were happy to do it for free. Of those who stated an amount, the most popular options were smaller sums, 8% said a value up to £20 would tempt them, while a further 8% cited a payment between £21 and £40. Only 5% said an amount of £100 or more would prompt them to donate. The poll's Have Your Say feature attracted some passionate comments, with a number of readers citing safety concerns as one of the reasons they didn't agree with payment for donations. Stephen A from Westbury, said: "I don't think it is a good idea to pay people for blood donations because we could have a similar situation to the blood scandal in the seventies. People who had all sorts of illnesses and drug-related problems sold their blood and created an unnecessary health problem for otherwise healthy individuals." Richard S from the Highlands agreed, saying: "Payment for blood will attract many short of money because they have taken drugs." Some readers even said payment would prevent them from donating. "I decided to become a blood donor when my wife was admitted to hospital in the last month of pregnancy," said Ian H from Hinckley. "I have now completed 104 donations … If I was told at that first donation that I would be paid, I would not have continued." However, some including Lenny T from Kent, said they agreed with payments for donation. "If it means more people will donate blood, it will help hospitals and doctors," they explained. Others said there were better ways to attract more donors, such as making the opening times and locations of donor centres more convenient, as well as increasing the age limit for giving blood, which currently stands at 65. "Those who donate do so for the best of reasons, to help others. it is a privilege to be able to help those in desperate need, and I was glad to be able to do so," said HMW from the Scottish Highlands. "I wish they would take blood from older folk – I'm late 60s – even if they have some health issues. If their iron is okay and you are not on life-saving meds, and are a universal donor – group O – it would help in crisis situations. I would love to be able to do something so useful beyond retirement." Denise D who lives in Italy said that convenience was an issue. "My daughter tried to give blood, she's donated for a long time. She tried to get another appointment, the first available appointment was three months later and 30 miles away," she said. "There need to be more collection points and nearer city centres." N Anderson from Worcestershire agreed saying: "Maybe the service should come to local villages, as they used to, asking people to travel to main towns with transport and parking charges is not on." Read more of Yahoo UK's Poll of the Week articles

Bone Inflammation Flags Pain Post-TFCC Surgery
Bone Inflammation Flags Pain Post-TFCC Surgery

Medscape

time7 hours ago

  • Medscape

Bone Inflammation Flags Pain Post-TFCC Surgery

A retrospective cohort study of patients who underwent triangular fibrocartilage complex (TFCC) repair surgery found that bone marrow oedema on postoperative MRI was associated with persistent wrist pain, whereas scarring and effusions at the TFCC were not. METHODOLOGY: Researchers retrospectively enrolled patients with TFCC lesions treated using arthroscopy-assisted, mini-open TFCC outside-in repair between 2012 and 2016. A total of 17 patients older than 16 years (mean age at the time of surgery, 35 years; 41% men) were included. Postoperative MRI scans were performed within 24 months after arthroscopy, with a mean follow-up duration of 22 months. The pain level was assessed with patient-reported outcome measurements using the Munich Wrist Questionnaire. Clinical examination was conducted, and MRI scans were evaluated. TAKEAWAY: Postoperative MRI scans revealed scar tissue at the TFCC in 59% of patients and effusion in the ulnar recess in 53% of patients, with neither finding showing a consistent association with pain. Bone marrow oedema was observed in the lunate of 29% of patients (three with and two without pain) and in the distal radioulnar joint (DRUJ) of 6% of patients with pain. Bone oedema was associated with pain. Degenerative changes, including radioulnar arthrosis and DRUJ cartilage thinning, defects, or cysts, were not associated with pain. IN PRACTICE: "This present study is the first study correlating postoperative MRI findings after arthroscopic assisted TFCC surgery with both pain and function. Bone edema seems to be associated with pain, whereas scarring at the TFCC is visible on MRI but is not necessarily associated with pain," the authors wrote. SOURCE: This study was led by Francesca von Matthey, Klinikum Rechts der Isar, Technische Universität München, Munich, Germany. It was published online on May 26, 2025, in the Journal of Clinical Medicine . LIMITATIONS: This study included a small number of patients who underwent arthroscopic-assisted, mini-open TFCC outside-in repair, limiting the statistical power and generalisability of the findings. DISCLOSURES: This study did not receive any external funding. The authors reported having no conflicts of interest.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store