Delayed Diagnosis of Gynaecological Cancers: Why Delays Happen and Why Legal Advice Matters

At Browell Smith & Co, our clinical negligence team regularly supports women and families affected by the delayed diagnosis of gynaecological cancers. These cases are sadly becoming more common, with national data showing significant delays across the NHS in diagnosing and treating cancers such as ovarian, cervical and endometrial cancer.

A delay in diagnosis can have life‑changing consequences. This guide explains what the latest research tells us, why delays occur, and what steps you can take if you believe your diagnosis was missed or delayed.

The Scale of the Problem in the UK

Recent reports show widespread delays:

  • Only 73.8% of patients receive a diagnosis or exclusion within 28 days of referral, meaning over a quarter face delays.
  • Over one in three cancer diagnoses now face critical delays, contributing to a 13% higher mortality risk.
  • Over 763,000 women are currently waiting for gynaecological care, with emergency cases rising sharply.
  • Most delayed cancer claims show diagnosis at stage 3–4, often due to missed opportunities in early assessment.

Why Gynaecological Cancers Are Often Diagnosed Late

Delays occur at multiple stages:

1. Patient‑Related Delays

  • Symptoms such as bloating or abnormal bleeding are often mistaken for benign conditions.
  • Women may delay seeking help due to embarrassment, caring responsibilities or difficulty accessing GP appointments.

2. Primary Care Delays

  • Symptoms misunderstood or reassured instead of investigated.
  • Incorrect referral coding (e.g., urgent rather than suspected cancer) resulting in months of preventable delay.
  • Limited access to investigations such as ultrasound or CA‑125 testing.

3. Hospital/System Delays

  • Shortages of radiologists and oncologists leading to slower imaging and review.
  • Backlogs due to rising demand and insufficient capacity.

4. Delays After Diagnosis

  • Evidence shows delays of over 8 weeks for endometrial cancer surgery increase recurrence rates and the need for more aggressive treatment.
  • Delays in ovarian and endometrial cancer treatment are linked to worse survival rates.

What Types of Delay May Amount to Negligence?

We commonly investigate cases involving:

  • Failure to recognise early symptoms.
  • Failure to carry out necessary investigations.
  • Incorrect referral pathways.
  • Failure to follow up on abnormal test results.
  • Delays in treatment once a diagnosis is confirmed.

Why Early Legal Advice Matters

Delayed diagnosis can lead to more invasive treatment, fertility loss, psychological trauma and reduced survival chances. Early legal advice helps determine whether an earlier diagnosis would have improved the outcome.

How Browell Smith & Co Can Help

As specialist claimant clinical negligence solicitors, we have extensive experience supporting women affected by delayed cancer diagnosis.

We offer:

  • Free initial advice
  • The option to speak with our in‑house solicitor‑midwife
  • A local, compassionate and expert service

If you believe your diagnosis was delayed, contact us for confidential advice.

Back to News

Request a Callback

Request a callback and our team will be back in touch as quickly as possible for a free initial consultation. We're continuing to deliver a quality service and our teams are available to take new enquiries and manage existing caseloads via calls and/or video conferencing.