After taking a pause from royal duties to prioritize his health, King Charles, aged 75, has resumed his official public engagements following his cancer diagnosis.
Today, on April 30th, he paid a visit to a cancer treatment center in London, meeting with medical experts and fellow patients.
As a patron of the cancer charity Macmillan Cancer Support, Charles, accompanied by Queen Camilla, arrived at the University College Hospital Macmillan Cancer Center in central London on Tuesday morning.

Their visit serves to underscore the significance of early diagnosis and showcase the groundbreaking research being conducted at the treatment facility.
Additionally, Buckingham Palace declared on Tuesday that the King has assumed the role of royal patron for Cancer Research UK.
Charles was spotted waving to the sizable crowds assembled outside the medical facility and was overheard sharing a jest upon his arrival.

This marks the first occasion since his diagnosis that he has engaged with large gatherings of people.

King Charles declared his resolute comeback to royal duties on Friday, April 26th, through an official proclamation from Buckingham Palace.
Reports of Charles’s cancer diagnosis surfaced in February subsequent to a procedure for an enlarged prostate, during which physicians identified “a separate issue of concern” necessitating treatment.
Subsequently, Buckingham Palace clarified that the cancer was distinct from prostate cancer.
