Do not face a cancer result alone.
A result saying cancer, suspicious cells, adenocarcinoma, carcinoma, lymphoma, atypical cells or a positive biopsy can be frightening and confusing. Kebeza helps patients and families understand what the result means, whether it truly fits the clinical picture, what stage may be possible, and what the next steps should be.
A cancer result is not enough. You need interpretation and direction.
Many patients receive reports full of medical words but are not told clearly what they mean. A report may say carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, malignant cells, suspicious cells, high-grade lesion, lymphoma, metastatic disease, positive margins, or other terms that can change the direction of care.
At Kebeza, the goal is to turn that result into understandable language and a practical action plan. We help you understand what has been diagnosed, whether the result needs confirmation, whether more tests are required, and which specialist pathway makes sense.
Who this page is for
This service is for patients and families who already have a report or have been told something worrying after a test, but still feel unclear about what it means.
You were told it is cancer
We explain the diagnosis in plain language and help organize the next questions: confirmation, stage, urgency, specialist referral and treatment direction.
You are not sure what the words mean
Terms like adenocarcinoma, carcinoma, atypical cells, malignancy, dysplasia, positive margins or suspicious cells can be difficult. We translate them into clear meaning.
You want another expert view
If the diagnosis feels serious or unclear, we can guide second opinion review of reports, slides, blocks, FNAC material, scans and related clinical information.
What we do during result explanation
We look at the wording of the result, the site of disease, symptoms, imaging where available, and what question the test was trying to answer.
Some reports are final. Others are preliminary, suspicious, limited, or need more tissue. We help you understand the difference.
For serious diagnoses, second opinion review may be useful, especially where the result affects surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy or overseas care plans.
We help you understand what stage means, what information is already available, and what scans, tests or specialist reviews may be needed to clarify it.
The aim is to leave with direction: what to do next, which specialist to see, what documents to carry, and whether urgent coordination is needed.
Reports we commonly explain
You do not need to know whether your report is called pathology, histology, cytology or imaging. If it is related to cancer, a swelling, a biopsy, FNAC or suspected malignancy, Kebeza can help you understand it.
Biopsy results
Breast, prostate, cervix, stomach, bowel, lymph node, skin, thyroid and other biopsy results that need explanation or second opinion direction.
FNAC results
Fine needle aspiration results from breast lumps, thyroid swellings, lymph nodes, neck masses and other swellings.
Scan-related cancer concerns
Where imaging suggests a mass, suspected cancer, lymph node disease, spread or staging concern, we help connect the result to the next diagnostic step.
Why explanation matters
Cancer care can move slowly when patients are sent from one place to another without clear direction. Delay may mean repeated hospital visits, repeated tests, confusion among family members, and missed opportunities to act early.
Clear explanation helps you know whether the diagnosis is confirmed, whether more tissue is needed, whether staging has started, whether treatment planning can begin, and whether a second opinion is worth doing before major decisions are made.
Have a cancer result you do not understand?
Send the report to Kebeza or book a private explanation session. We help you understand what it means, whether it needs confirmation, and what should happen next.