BBC Strictlys Amy Dowdens joy as she enters final week of chemo amid cancer battle

Strictly Come Dancing professional Amy Dowden shared her joy as she heads into her final week of chemotherapy treatment, saying she had the "biggest smile".

Amy, 33, announced in June that she had undergone a mastectomy after discovering she had stage three breast cancer.

Taking on Instagram on Monday, Amy shared her joy over her upcoming appointments this week, saying it has felt "such a distance" away.

Sharing a beaming selfie as she posed from the sofa with a cup of tea in a breast cancer awareness mug, Amy wrote: "The biggest smile I've had on a Monday since the beginning of August!

"Why because I'm entering LAST WEEK OF CHEMO! Eeeekkkk this week has felt such a distance for sooooo long. Hospital apt later, bloods tomorrow and hopefully (if all good with my bloods) it's all go for the LAST CHEMO THURSDAY," she wrote.

Last week Amy appeared on the Stand Up To Cancer live show at the Francis Crick Institute to celebrate a decade of the appeal for Cancer Research UK.

Sporting a blue blazer and matching trousers, Amy told presenter Davina McCall she has her last chemotherapy session on Thursday and is looking forward to being able to “ring that chemo bell”.

“It has been the toughest year of my life but I’m just really hoping with the surgery that I’ve already had and the chemo that I’ve done enough,” she said.

“I’ve had sepsis, blood clots, I’ve had to have hormone treatment then been put into menopause.

“When I sat in that room and the doctors said, ‘Amy, yes you have cancer’, that was one stab, and then, ‘What’s your fertility plans?’, because I’ve got an oestrogen-fed cancer and they need to shut my ovaries down, basically, and my husband is next to me and we’ve only been married a couple of months.

“It’s just heart-breaking and that is something I never knew and the impact emotionally, it has just been so tough.”

Amy announced in June that she had undergone a mastectomy after discovering she had stage three breast cancer.

She said: “You don’t get mammograms in the UK until you’re in your 50s, I would never have thought at 32 I was going to get diagnosed with breast cancer.

“If I wasn’t checking myself I would never have found it. If you’re not checking yourself, who is? Get to know your own chest.”

Amy also said the NHS had been “incredible” during her breast cancer treatment.

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