CA153 Breast Cancer Tumour Marker Home Kit
CA153 Pancreatic Cancer Blood Test Home Kit. Breast carcinoma cells are the primary source of this glycoprotein, which has a high molecular weight. Female breast cancer surpassed lung cancer as the most prevalent cancer disease.
Why Get the CA153 Profile?
A high level of the CA153 tumour marker can indicate a certain type of cancer. It helps the oncologist decide what treatment or combination will work best for a certain type of cancer. It also helps evaluate how well some treatments are working. Sometimes, tumour markers are used for screening to help detect a certain type of cancer in people at high risk before they have signs or symptoms.
1 Biomarker:
What are the Breast Cancer Home Kit Instructions?
Kindly collect your Breast Cancer sample in the morning. It is recommended that you use this for a minimum of one hour prior to taking any medication.
Try to follow these recommendations when gathering your sample:
- Consume a lot of water. It will be easier to get your sample if you are adequately hydrated.
- It is recommended that you shower with warm water or run your palms under warm water for a few minutes prior to taking the test, as heat enhances blood flow.
- Perform light exercise, such as walking or moving around, to stimulate the circulation.
- Ensure that your arm is below the level of your heart.
- Too-long nails can complicate the process of obtaining a sample.
- Avoid vigorously shaking the sample. Instead, gently invert the container ten times. (After each drop of blood, gently rotate the tube).
- Avoid squeezing (milking).
- If necessary, rewarm your palms.
How Does the Order Process Work?
Purchase your CA153 Breast Cancer blood evaluation home kit and perform sample collection yourself.
Make a drop-off of the sample you took here: Royal Mail Red Street Box. Return label used for our lab should be Track 24/48.
After our turnaround time, please check your email or site dashboard for your results.
How Many Days Will My Results Take?
The target turnaround time for the CA153 Breast Cancer Tumour mMarker Blood test is 1 day.
Please deliver your sample through Royal Mail from Monday to Thursday to minimize the chance of any delays.
Letting the sample sit risks clotting which completely invalidates it. Therefore, it must be disposed of and retaken.
Please take your test on a Monday to Thursday to avoid delivery delays at the lab.
*The test is sold as part of the MOL research program. And the purchaser agrees to provide feedback data to MOL. This data is pre-authorised to be used anonymously in this research data program.
Why Should You Use Our Evaluation Kit?
- Cutting-edge laboratory technology (newest and greatest).
- Direct deal with our Laboratories for unbeatable Prices and Support.
- Track24 Pre-paid Label for Delivery to Lab.
- CA153 Tumour Marker evaluation result certificate sent to you by Confidential Email (No SMS).
- We provide support through WhatsApp during our business hours.
What are the most frequently asked questions?
Q: Who is susceptible to this illness?
A: CA153 related diseases are conditions that can affect all women. There are numerous risk factors, including age, giving birth after the age of 30 or never, insufficient exercise, alcohol consumption, an early first menstrual period (before the age of 12), menopause after the age of 55, not breastfeeding, and long-term use of hormone replacement therapy.
Q: What are the symptoms?
A: The most prevalent symptom is a lump or mass, enlargement of the breast, breast or nipple pain, nipple retraction, nipple discharge other than milk, and irritated breast skin.
Q: What are some ways to decrease the likelihood of contracting this illness?
A: By maintaining a consistent weight, consuming less alcohol, breastfeeding for at least the first six months, and engaging in regular exercise, you can decrease your risk.
Q: What is the prevalence of this particular illness?
A: This is the most prevalent form of breast cancer in the United Kingdom.
Q: What is the total number of stages in this disease?
A: It comprises stages ranging from 0 to IV.
Q: What is the most effective method for identifying it?
A: A digital mammogram.
Do you have a Shared Story like mine?
Laura Martin
Twelve years have passed… 12 years ago, at this time, I got my CA153 Breast Cancer Tumour marker result that was positive; I entered a very cold operating room of a hospital. I was scared to death, crying and shaking. I only remember a nurse holding my hand while they were giving me anaesthesia, and he told me to be strong and that everything would be fine. Then I woke up in my room, and in front of my bed was the doctor who operated on me (whom I can never thank enough), my husband and my daughter. They said things, but I just wanted to feel that “the guest” had completely disappeared…
I still didn’t know what was waiting for me.
I remember New Year’s Eve; from the bedroom window, I saw the fireworks in the sky of Rome, and I thought of my husband and daughter in a hotel room and of my son and grandfather at home. Alone. An unforgettable New Year’s Eve… in every sense.
I just wanted to go home, but after a few days, I had another exam. They let me into a room and told me that the “host” had been removed, but it was a bit aggressive, so it was better to do some chemotherapy and then also some radiotherapy.
Ok fine. It begins.
A small intervention to insert the Pic and the first session begins, and then every 21 days, we return to Rome for the following. A nightmare. The hair falling out, the moon face and the pain… the post-chemo pain is one of the strongest I’ve ever felt.
And then…then we start with the radio. Every day at 1:05 p.m., they charge me a piece, always the same, and every day at 1:05 p.m., I would like to be anywhere but there.
Looking back today, I realise it was the worst year of my life.
But now I’m out.
I am a survivor, and today, after 12 years, I have to thank those who made this happen.
First of all, my Prof. “forced” me to do the biopsy, and then my doctor operated on me on New Year’s Eve and saved my life (he is now a Prof respected everywhere). My family never left me alone. Never. Me, my husband, my daughter, my son and my father-in-law.
The five of us did great.
A team. A force. My strength.
My best friend (she knows I’m talking about her) made me take regular checks. She also forced me to eat even when I couldn’t hold anything back, go out even if I couldn’t stand up, and cut her wonderful curls so I wouldn’t feel alone.
Here… I’m here to tell anyone going through a similar period that “the guest” can be sent away; it takes courage, tenacity, strength and luck. But it can.
I write all this to raise awareness among women to do prevention, have checks, and trust their innate sixth sense. We know our body; if we feel something wrong that shouldn’t be there, we check because the “guest” is smart, but we are smarter!”
Christina
It was March 23, 2021, when I was diagnosed positive. Since then, my life has changed completely; everything around me has taken on a different meaning; the certainties I had have started to crumble like a sandcastle, fears have taken over, and the light-heartedness that has always characterised me has left space for concerns.
You are never ready for news like this: cancer arrives, it makes no distinctions, and it bursts into your life like a tornado, uprooting everything in its path.
The monster had hit me, a girl of just 29 years old.
In the days that followed, I fell asleep with the hope of waking up from a nightmare, but unfortunately, the disease was reality, and to remind me of it, there was that lump that was proliferating inside my breast.
Since then, I have always tried to find an answer to the question, “Why me?”.
In the months that followed, I blamed myself; I was convinced that I had done something wrong in life to deserve it. Then, one day, a Doctor told me: “Cristina, the Lord entrusts evil only to those who are strong, to those who know how to face it!”. I have clung to that phrase ever since.
I began to fight against the pain not only of the body but also of the mind, which are the most difficult to fight because they take root in your every thought, conditioning your every choice, your every gesture, even the stupidest.
I could handle anything.
I have to fight.” It was with this thought that I faced the long and endless months of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and the subsequent bilateral mastectomy surgery.
I then began to convince myself that it couldn’t bring me to my knees, couldn’t hinder my decisions, my habits, and my daily joys.
I have always tried to smile at life, even though it had given me, to resist the excruciating pain of chemo, the suffering of seeing myself in the mirror without my long black hair and the unstoppable change in my body. Fighting, however, would not have been possible without the support of the Laboratory and teams for the Tumour Markers, the people closest to me, who fought day and night at my side.
Cancer made me understand who matters in my life, what it means to love a person and to be loved in the same way, to build a future with them after; it highlighted the boundless love of a mother, a father, of a brother, of an aunt. It also introduces you to a world of doctors and nurses who do everything they can to fight this terrible disease with you on the front line.
Angels are here
It is not true that angels are found only in heaven; angels are found here, around us, and I was lucky to meet them. I am referring to the doctors who treated me. Without them, I would not have been able to overcome the evil attacking me; they picked me up and healed me with unimaginable care.
I felt protected, cared for and above all, understood, and this is what is needed most by a person facing harsh oncological treatments. In this obstacle course, the women and men who faced the infamous chemo with me every Thursday had particular importance. I remember their eyes, looks, words, and the strength and courage we transmitted to each other to win our battle. Everything changes inside that room, and it’s as if you were living in a parallel world, incomprehensible to the eyes of those waiting for you outside.
That place is now part of me and will always be, as are all the details that characterised it: the suffocating smell of disinfectant and chemotherapy drugs, the red colour of chemotherapy, the sound of the therapy machine and that strange sensation of fear mixed with a desire for life that enveloped me every time I lay down in the armchair.
It was March 23, 2021, when my life changed.
Since then, a new Cristina has been born; there is a Cristina before and after tests. Today, I am getting to know this new person; I am trying to manage her anxieties and fears linked to the discovery of the BRCA1 genetic mutation. Today, Cristina is on a boat in the middle of the calm sea; she is tired after fighting and overcoming the waves of the stormy sea. Cristina is there; she is rowing towards her island of happiness. There is no certainty about how long it will take to reach her, but one thing is certain: Cristina is rowing with all her energy against any weather.
Shipping and Return Policies
Appointment:
Missed appointments or cancellations less than 24 hours prior are not entitled to refunds. Rescheduling is possible but not guaranteed. Please contact the customer service prior to the appointment time to discuss cost and availability options.
Shipping & Return:
We have a 14-day return policy, which means you have 14 days after receiving your item to request a return.
To Qualify for any return, the product must be in the same condition as when you received it. Not used, not opened, unworn, in its original packaging. You will also need to send it to us with the receipt or proof of purchase.
Please return to: Medicines by MailBox, 89 Falcon Rd, London. SW11 2PF
You can read our full return policy here:
https://medicinesbymailbox.co.uk/return-policy/
We offer next day delivery; however courier delivery times are out of our control. We are unable to offer refunds for any late deliveries. But you will receive courier tracking information once your order has been dispatched. And orders placed by 1pm are dispatched on the same day.
Shipping and Return Policy
Packaging Information
Weight: 0.25kg
Dimensions: 35 x 25 x 2.5cm
Sample Method Swab/Urine Options
We have a 14-day return policy, which means you have 14 days after receiving your item to request a return.
Our company provides a 14-day return policy, which means that for 14 days since receiving your Breast Cancer home kit order, you can request a return to us for valid reasons.
You must ensure that the CA153 kit is in the exact same condition as it arrived, meaning that you may not open or use the kit and it must still be in its original package. Your purchase receipt also needs to be included as evidence.
The return address is:
Medicines Online, 89 Falcon Road, London, SW11 2PF.
We strongly suggest reading our full return policy here: https://medicinesbymailbox.com/return-policy/
Notes about Royal Mail and DHL Courier Services:
While we do offer a next-day CA153 delivery; courier delivery times are out of our control. Therefore, you are not able to request refunds for any late deliveries. Courier tracking information will be sent to you once your order has been dispatched. Orders placed by a cutoff time of 1 PM are dispatched on the same day.
Lara –
Using the testing kits was a breeze! Clear instructions made it easy to collect sample at home, and the process was straightforward.
Chloe Spence –
The customer service team was helpful and responsive. The results were extremely fast