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Strictly dancer Amy Dowden has revealed she has been diagnosed with grade three breast cancer.
The 32-year-old was diagnosed last week after checking more often following a charity trek for the disease.
Already a campaigner for awareness for Crohn's Disease, Amy said she hoped sharing her diagnosis would will help others and herself in her recovery.
"If I can try and turn this negative into a positive, it's going to help me get through this."
Amy, from Caerphilly, who became a Strictly Come Dancing professional 2017, shared her interview with Hello! magazine on Instagram, telling her 328,000 followers of her diagnosis.
She said: "Hey all, I've got some news which isn't easy to share. I've recently been diagnosed with breast cancer but I'm determined to get back on that dancefloor before you know it. Welsh love Amy."
Amy is already an active campaigner for Crohn's Disease and ambassador for Crohn's & Colitis UK, having had it since being a child.
"I've been through quite a lot in my life and this is another hurdle," Amy told Hello! magazine.
"But if I'm positive and strong, I've got a really good chance of getting back out on the dancefloor as soon as possible.
"With what I've done for Crohn's, I want to do the same here," said Amy, who made a BBC documentary, Strictly Amy: Crohn's and Me, to help raise awareness of the chronic disease.
"You just don't ever think it's going to happen to you," she said.
"I hadn't thought it was possible to get breast cancer at my age. My mum has had breast cancer, but she had it at a later age, in her 50s."
Amy discovered the lump in April, a day before she was due to fly on her honeymoon to the Maldives with husband Ben.
"I was in the shower and I felt this hard lump in my right breast," said Amy.
"I was in shock. I checked again. I thought: 'Right, it could just be period-related, or so many things. I decided I was going to keep an eye on it for a few weeks."
She said on holiday however she was putting lotion on every day and could feel it more.
Worried the stress would flare up her Crohn's, she went straight to the doctors when she was home.
After an emergency referral from her GP, she said "everything happened so fast" and was told she would need someone with her for the results.
She said one of her first thoughts was how long it would take her to get back on the dancefloor.
Amy is still waiting to hear more before she is given a full treatment plan but said it will definitely include surgery.
"I don't know what stage the cancer is yet, until I have an MRI scan and a biopsy on a second lump they have found in the same breast. Once they've got that, they can give me a full prognosis."
Amy said she has learned to take her Crohn's in her stride and said she is using that same mental strength after her cancer diagnosis.
"I'm going to be as positive as I can and I want everybody who is surrounding me to also be positive - that's really important," she says. "I want put out there how important it is to check your chest - whether you're male or female."