Graduate Reveals How Missed Period And Facial Hair Turned Out To Be Signs Of Rare Cancer

A young woman has opened up about her shocking ovarian cancer diagnosis, after she began to develop thick facial hair and didn’t have a period for six months.

Amy Allen, then 18, of Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, was due to start her first year of a psychology degree at York St John’s University, when she saw her GP because her period had stopped. Not long after, she received the diagnosis.

Now 21 and recently graduated, Amy said: “I was the first person in living memory in Yorkshire to be diagnosed with that type of ovarian tumour, a Sertoli-Leydig sex cord tumour.

“I went to the hospital appointment alone and hearing the words, ‘It’s cancer’ was incredibly shocking.”

Initially, Amy, the eldest of four children, was wrongly suspected of suffering from polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), as her symptoms were very similar. PCOS causes many small and harmless follicles to grow on the ovaries and has symptoms including irregular or no periods and excess body and facial hair.

Recalling the moment her GP told her she needed further tests during freshers’ week, Amy said: “The doctor from home rang me to ensure I was getting checked out. My blood test results had revealed that my testosterone levels were 2.5 times higher than they should be, and my oestrogen levels were significantly lower.”

Subsequent ultra-scan and MRI scans carried out at York Hospital in late 2014 indicated that Amy had a suspected cyst on her ovary. In March 2015, she had this biopsied, so it could be examined more closely.

Amy continued: “Seven weeks had passed and I’d had my first period in a year and I thought everything was dandy. My periods had started at about 14, but after a few years they gave me very severe lower back pain and I developed bad facial hair. Then they stopped not long after I turned 18.”

Contacted about a post-biopsy appointment, Amy went alone, believing everything was fine, only to be told she had cancer.

She recalled: “The doctors and nurses were so nice. They explained everything and we had a laugh about the rarity and excitement of the type of tumour – the first one to be diagnosed in Yorkshire.

“If I hadn’t laughed I would have cried.”

But she saved her tears until she could call her housemates, when she sobbed down the phone.

“Getting the diagnosis was the scariest day of my life and a memory that will stay with me for a while,” she admitted.

“At 19 years old and coming towards the end of my first year of university, cancer was not something I thought I’d personally have to go through.”

Not only is ovarian cancer very rare in teens, but Sertoli-Leydig tumours, described as rare sex cord stromal tumours of the ovary by the charity Target Ovarian Cancer, are particularly unusual, with characteristics including lower pitch of voice and baldness or thicker body hair.

Amy continued: “The Sertoli and Leydig cells are in the testes of males, with Sertoli cells feeding sperm cells and Leydig cells releasing a male sex hormone.

“These cells are also found in the ovaries, with cancer cells releasing a male sex hormone causing symptoms such as a deep voice, enlarged clitoris, facial hair, loss in breast size and stopping of menstrual periods.”

Told that, as the cancer was confined to her ovary she did not need chemotherapy or radiotherapy, Amy had surgery at Leeds General Hospital in August 2015.

She decided to have her left ovary removed, but to keep the right one, meaning she could still have children in the future.

“It took a while for the news of what was wrong with me to sink in,” she said. “When it did, I realised I had some important decisions to make – decisions that had to be mine and mine alone.

“I decided to get my ovary removed in case there was any trace of cancer left. It was the right decision, too, as there was.

“Thankfully everything else came back clear and I’m still in remission.

“I’m speaking out so people know that ovarian cancer doesn’t just affect older people, although it is more common in older women.

“I was lucky, because the doctor rang me back and said this was quite serious and to get it checked out.

“But my advice, particularly to younger people, is, ‘Don’t ignore it if you feel that something is serious and don’t allow yourself to be fobbed off.’

“If my cancer hadn’t been discovered, I would never have been able to live life in the way I do now and to have achieved the things I’ve achieved.”

Previously speaking to HuffPost UK, Dr Alex Eskander, consultant gynaecologist at The Gynae Centre, said if a woman’s period stops for more than three months, and it’s not because they’re taking hormonal contraception, they should see a health professional.

“It is not unusual to miss a period for between one and three months due to common factors such as stress,” he said. “Most of the time it will return to normal. But if your periods are late by three months, you should see your doctor or gynaecologist without delay.”

Amy was supported by and continues to fundraise for the charity Ovarian Cancer Action. Visit http://ovarian.org.uk/.