Inma Ibáñez, speaking in first person about her breast cancer treatment | OneFootball

Inma Ibáñez, speaking in first person about her breast cancer treatment | OneFootball

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Valencia CF

·19 October 2025

Inma Ibáñez, speaking in first person about her breast cancer treatment

Article image:Inma Ibáñez, speaking in first person about her breast cancer treatment

On the occasion of World Breast Cancer Day, commemorated every October 19Inma Ibáñez wanted to share her testimony to raise awareness about the importance of regular check-ups for early detection and the need to allocate resources to scientific research to advance treatments.“With this, you go through bad days, regular days and better days; and the truth is that today I’m having one of the better ones, so I’m not going to complain,” begins Inma, with a smile on her face.

TO DEAL WITH IT, NOT TO WORRY ABOUT IT “I haven’t hidden it. This is a disease that affects, if I’m not mistaken, one in every eight women. In our case, if we talk about Valencia CF season ticket holders, we’re talking about around 6,700 women, and of them, 850 have suffered or will suffer from it. It’s sadly a very high number that we have to face calmly, with the confidence, certainty and hope that this can be overcome and cured thanks to medical advances, but it must be faced, we must deal with it, not just worry about it,” she explains.


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Inma acknowledges, “What I’ve found hardest to accept is being left with zero energy, my defences drop, because I used to be very active, and it’s tough to see you can’t do anything. I’ve shed some tears. That’s hard.”

EARLY DETECTION, RESEARCH AND TREATMENT“Although I noticed it before my annual check-up, regular check-ups are very important. My advice to all women is not to skip them, because they make the difference between whether it spreads or not, in the severity of the consequences, and in how tough the treatment will be,” she says.

In fact, Inma notes, “What scared me the most was the idea of metastasis, but the tests ruled out that it had spread anywhere else.”“And what reassured me the most,” she continues, “was when the oncologist explained that the cancer I have today has a specific treatment with 99% effectiveness. At that moment, you breathe again and realise how crucial research and early detection are, and how necessary it is to invest in them. It’s vital that we all become aware of that.”

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