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Ex-Beatle Harrison: I feel fine

George Harrison
Harrison has battled cancer in the past  


LONDON, England -- Former Beatle George Harrison has said he is "feeling fine" after a successful course of radiotherapy at hospital in Switzerland.

A statement from Harrison's solicitor revealed that the former Beatle underwent treatment at the hospital in Bellinzona over a month ago, the UK Press Association reported.

The statement said Harrison had a course of radiotherapy at the clinic and that doctors do not see any need for further treatment at the hospital.

Harrison said: "I am feeling fine and I am really sorry for the unnecessary worry which has been caused by the reports appearing in today's press. Please do not worry."

Reports about Harrison undergoing treatment came two months after Harrison received lung cancer therapy in the U.S..

Institute director Luca Borner declined to confirm the reports due to patient confidentiality, the Associated Press reported on Monday.

Harrison, 58, had surgery at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, at the beginning of May to remove a cancerous growth from one of his lungs.

His lawyers said that after the successful operation he had travelled to Italy to rest.

He was also treated for throat cancer in the late 1990s after he found a lump on his neck.

He had surgery followed by two courses of radiation therapy at the Royal Marsden Hospital, Britain's leading cancer treatment centre.

"Luckily for me they found that this nodule was more of a warning than anything else. There are many different types of cancerous cells and this was a very basic type," he said at the time. In 1999, Harrison also suffered a punctured lung when he was stabbed by a man who broke into his home in Henley-on-Thames, west of London.

A 34-year-old man, Michael Abram, was acquitted by reason of insanity and confined to a mental hospital.

Speaking earlier this year, the intensely private Harrison said: "I had a little throat cancer. I had a piece of my lung removed in 1997. And then I was almost murdered.

"But I seem to feel stronger. I don't smoke any more. I'm a little more short of breath than I used to be, so I don't see myself on stage lasting a full 14 rounds."






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