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After the all-clear

January 23, 2026

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Gulf News

Cervical cancer does not always end when treatment does. For many women, the hardest phase begins after cure

- GN Focus Report

The moment a woman hears you are clear is supposed to signal relief.

For many, it does. For others, it marks the beginning of a quieter, more complicated chapter. Treatment ends and life is expected to resume. Yet for a significant number of cervical cancer survivors, the body does not cooperate with the narrative of closure.

This is the invisible middle of cervical cancer. It sits between diagnosis and cure. It is the stretch where women are technically cancer-free yet far from well. Research over the past two years has begun to give this phase a name, and more importantly, a language. Survivors describe feeling cured and unsettled at the same time. One woman quoted in a 2024 qualitative study published in Psycho-Oncology captured it plainly. “The treatment ended, but my body didn't go back to how it was,” she said. “I felt cured and broken at the same time.”

When treatment ends, the body doesn’t

Long-term effects after cervical cancer treatment are neither rare nor incidental. A growing body of evidence shows that surgery, radiation and chemotherapy leave behind physical changes that can persist for years. Pelvic pain, bladder and bowel dysfunction, nerve damage, fatigue and hormonal disruption appear repeatedly across survivorship studies. These symptoms often fall outside the narrow scope of post-treatment followup, which tends to prioritise surveillance for recurrence over quality of life.

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