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Experts' warning over 'silent' cancer most people have never heard of as cases soar in under 50s - the symptoms everyone MUST know

Experts' warning over 'silent' cancer most people have never heard of as cases soar in under 50s - the symptoms everyone MUST know

Daily Mail​27-05-2025

A kidney cancer campaigner has urgently warned people not ignore the early signs of the disease that most people either don't know about or don't take seriously.
In the UK, around 13,000 people are diagnosed with kidney cancer—38 every day.
The 'silent' cancer, which is among the fastest growing, is often symptomless in early stages so is often not diagnosed until later stages, when it has spread to other areas of the body and survival rates plummet.
This warning has come over fears a lack of awareness of seemingly harmless symptoms is putting lives in danger.
Despite being the sixth most common cancer, Malcolm Packer, CEO of Kidney Cancer UK, told the Huffington Post, it is 'dangerously under-recognised'.
'Kidney cancer is one of the fastest-growing cancers in the UK,' he said.
He warned a lack of awareness and funding to tackle the condition which has no routine screening programme has 'real consequences'.
'Unlike some other cancers, there are no routine screening programmes and symptoms can be vague or easily dismissed.
'As a result, many people aren't diagnosed until stage two or three—at which point treatment becomes more complex,' he said.
Mortality rates for kidney cancer have risen by 73 per cent in the UK since the 1970s, with cases soaring among those under 50.
However, the CEO, highlighting the importance of knowing the early signs, said: 'Catching kidney cancer early can dramatically improve outcomes.'
He shared the key symptoms to look out for, including those that 'seem mild or unrelated at first glance'.
Blood in the urine—even once— is the most common and potentially most telling early sign.
And the discolouration is not always obvious, according to Mr Packer.
It may appear bright pink or red, but it can also feature a very slight tinge. Either way, it shouldn't be ignored.
A dull or persistent discomfort in the lower back or either side of your spine below the ribs, known as the flank, can be caused by kidney cancer, he added.
As can a mass or swelling in your side, which could be a tumour in or near the kidney area.
If weight loss is sudden and unexplained, particularly if you are experiencing other symptoms, this is also a red flag.
This warning comes not long after high profile former American basketball point guard Dwayne Wade revealed he had kidney cancer.
NBA legend Dwayne Wade, 43, revealed subtle stomach pains and a routine check-up led to his kidney cancer diagnosis.
He shared earlier this year that he had 40 per cent of one of his kidneys removed in December 2023, after finding a stage one cancerous tumour.
He said: 'I talked about just having a slow stream, like sometimes when I would go to the bathroom, my urine would come out little slow.
'I had some cramps, some pain, a little bit at times in my stomach that I did not understand.
'But I didn't think nothing of it. And so, once I finally went in, I was like, 'OK, I just want to know everything''.
Both Wade's father and grandfather had battled prostate cancer—a fact that had always kept him worried about his health.
He told TODAY: '[The doctor] expressed to me that it was very early, but they thought they saw something on my kidneys.
'I didn't go in for my kidneys. I went in to check what was going on my stomach and my prostate'.
A report by Kidney Cancer UK published earlier this year revealed that almost all cases of the disease are spotted by accident.
That means patients are only being diagnosed when they have a scan for an unrelated condition or in an emergency department.
Just one in five of the patients polled by the charity said their condition was spotted because they were sent for relevant tests by their GP.
Risk factors for the cancer include smoking, obesity, high blood pressure, chronic kidney disease or family history.
Treatment may include surgery, cryotherapy, radiofrequency ablation, targeted medicines, radiotherapy or chemotherapy.
But, individual treatment plans depend on what type of cancer you have, where it is, how big it is, if it has spread, and your general health.

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The Corbynista activist behind the militant pro-Palestinian group that targeted an RAF base
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And so, as Jeremy Corbyn's vision for Britain's left died, a new militant movement was born. In the five years since, the group has gone from ram-raiding factories and vandalising buildings to last night causing a major security breach when two of its members broke into RAF Brize Norton and damaged two military planes. Video footage shows two people on electric scooters shooting over the runway towards a Voyager – a so-called 'petrol station in the sky' used to refuel midair and to transport prime ministers and members of the Royal family. In an attack that has raised serious questions about the security at Britain's largest RAF station, the group seem to have managed to escape undetected after attacking two planes with crowbars and repurposed fire extinguishers. In the video, you can hear the splutter of spray paint as they fire red paint into the plane's engines. On Friday, it emerged that counter-terror police were leading the investigation into the incident. 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Lord Walney, then the Government's independent adviser on political violence and disruption, said the manual would become an important 'test case' of the police's willingness to take action against 'pernicious militants'. In 2022, the Jewish Chronicle went undercover at a Palestine Action meeting where activists discussed an attack that had taken place on a property in Oldham used by the Israel-based defence firm Elbit Systems, the group's main target. At the meeting, the paper reported, 'they set out their secret plans for a nationwide wave of mayhem and destruction'. 'Sporting an Arabic tattoo across his neck, Mr Barnard explained what was coming,' the paper reported. 'A sustained, intense series of 'direct actions' against Elbit offices was the objective. And as for tactics, think extreme. 'Activists could lock themselves under vans and break into factories to cause 'high-level damage' to machinery.' Advice, the paper said, was offered on how to cope with being arrested, including an instruction to wear old shoes. 'A person standing at the front backed this up by saying that the worst part about being arrested at a previous action had been the confiscation of their vegan leather Doc Martens.' After the Oct 7 2023 attacks, Barnard urged activists to 'smash Israeli weapons factories'. He appeared in court in September last year on charges of encouraging criminal damage and expressing support for Hamas at two pro-Palestinian rallies in October 2023. He claims that the case 'is part of a wider intimidation campaign against Palestine Action, and a crackdown of the wider movement.' A fundraising page for his case, set up last year, states: 'My trial is scheduled to last one week from April 14th at Manchester Crown Court ... Pushing back against the state intimidation campaign at every opportunity is crucial to defending free speech on Palestine.' In April, Palestine Action said his trial had been delayed until March 2026. Analysis by The Sunday Times showed the number of incidents for which Palestine Action was responsible increased from 17 in 2020 to 170 in 2024. In the past year, the group has pledged to escalate action. In November, activists stole the wrong statue in a raid on Manchester University, mistaking a bust of a professor for that of Chaim Weizmann, the first president of Israel. Meanwhile, their rhetoric seems to have grown increasingly aggressive. Ammori was filmed speaking at a concert alongside the rapper Lowkey, a staunch Palestine Action supporter, in November. The rapper was criticised by Sir William Shawcross, whose independent review of the Prevent counterterrorism scheme alleged that his lyrics promoted 'what I regard to be an antisemitic conspiracy theory about the 'Zionist lobby''. At the concert, Ammori told a riled up crowd: 'We drive vans through their gates. We drive vans through their front doors. 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