King Charles set to ‘pause’ his cancer treatment for 11 days during high-profile royal visit to Australia and Samoa later this month

The King’s doctors are allowing him to ‘pause’ his cancer treatment to fly to Australia next week for a high-profile royal visit.

The 75-year-old monarch will make a major official visit to Sydney and Canberra from October 18, immediately followed by a state visit to Samoa in the South Pacific, where he will attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM).

The Mail understands that His Majesty will continue his ongoing cancer treatment until his flight, but that his doctors are happy for it to be temporarily halted while he is away.

The king will then resume his treatment cycle once he returns to Britain.

Charles, 75, was diagnosed with an undisclosed form of the disease in February after prostate surgery and has been treated weekly since.

King Charles will make an important official visit to Australia from October 18

The official portrait of King Charles and Queen Camilla for the upcoming Australian tour, in which he wears the Sovereign's Badge of the Order of Australia and the Queen wears the Wattle Brooch given to Queen Elizabeth on her first visit as monarch in 1954

The official portrait of King Charles and Queen Camilla for the upcoming Australian tour, in which he wears the Sovereign’s Badge of the Order of Australia and the Queen wears the Wattle Brooch given to Queen Elizabeth on her first visit as monarch in 1954

Prince Charles, Prince of Wales and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall walk on Broadbeach on the Gold Coast, Australia in April 2018

Prince Charles, Prince of Wales and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall walk on Broadbeach on the Gold Coast, Australia in April 2018

However, news that the King is planning an 11-day door-to-door journey of 50,000 miles between treatments is both good news in terms of his health – and also highlights the devotion to duty he has shown since. he was diagnosed for the first time.

Buckingham Palace declined to comment.

King and his wife, Queen Camilla, have a busy schedule during their royal visit with up to ten appointments a day between them – and only have one day of rest.

However, sources emphasize that their program is organized in close consultation with his doctors and is “conscious” of his health. Appointments have been organized to give his further recovery ‘priority’.

His entourage will, as always, include a traveling doctor – a standard practice for the head of state.

The long-awaited trip is of great importance as it is his first visit to an empire of which he is head of state since he became king and his first CHOGM as head of the Commonwealth.

The workaholic royal has been urged to slow down by both his wife and advisers, but sources say he is feeling ‘energized’ by his work – and it has been important for him mentally to stick to his work at such a challenging time usual routine.

On Wednesday he hosted a reception at St James’ Palace to celebrate the Commonwealth diaspora ahead of his visit to CHOGM.

The official announcement of the tour on the royal family's Instagram account

The official announcement of the tour on the royal family’s Instagram account

King Charles has been urged by both his wife and advisers to slow down, but sources say he is feeling 'energized' by his work

King Charles has been urged by both his wife and advisers to slow down, but sources say he is feeling ‘energized’ by his work

Meanwhile, his wife, Queen Camilla, 77, (right), who has been praised for 'holding down the fort' since the start of the year, is planning a pre-tour break with friends this week. (King Charles III looks up as he awaits the reading of the King's Speech in July this year)

Meanwhile, his wife, Queen Camilla, 77, (right), who has been praised for ‘holding down the fort’ since the start of the year, is planning a pre-tour break with friends this week. (King Charles III looks up as he awaits the reading of the King’s Speech in July this year)

He was in great form and even took to the floor to show off his moves in a traditional Siva Samoan dance.

However, to arrange his recovery before his visit Down Under, the King returned to Scotland immediately afterwards, where he will largely remain until the time comes to travel.

He will continue to work on government papers and hold pre-CHOGM talks with world leaders at Birkhall, his private home near Balmoral. This week he will briefly return to London to hold the Privy Council, meet the Prime Minister and make medical appointments.

Meanwhile, his wife Queen Camilla, 77, who has been praised for ‘holding down the fort’ since the start of the year, is planning a pre-tour break with friends this week, it can also be revealed. Details cannot be made public for security reasons.

A source explained: ‘The fortnight leading up to the royal tour has been deliberately kept light for His Majesty. He will still have meetings, do his paperwork and still come in for treatment.

“Australia is a big deal and he wants to stay fit.

‘As soon as he comes back, he will immediately be in a very intense program until Christmas.

‘The late Queen was due to stay in Scotland until October and he has decided to do the same. It is a place of peace for him and that is more important than usual this year because of what lies ahead.

‘For a workaholic [like him] it’s a chance to catch your breath.’

Other sources say that His Majesty personally appears ‘in very good humour’. His treatment went much better than anyone expected.

This summer, Charles, who turns 76 next month, has been enjoying the fresh air in Scotland on long walks and foraging for mushrooms.

VISITS OF KING CHARLES TO AUSTRALIA

1966: It was not an official tour by a British royal family. Prince Charles’ first visit to Australian shores as a 17-year-old was as a student at the Timbertop, Victoria campus of Geelong Grammar School for one term.

1967: Prince Charles arrived as a representative of his mother the Queen at the memorial service for Prime Minister Harold Holt, who drowned while in office in Victoria.

1970: Prince Charles came to visit for part of the Queen and Prince Philip extensive tour, together with Princess Anne, on the occasion of the bicentenary of the ‘discovery’ of Captain James Cook in 1770 of Australia to claim it for the British Empire.

1978: Prince Charles made a brief visit in May 1978 to attend the funeral of former Prime Minister Sir Robert Menzies, a favorite of the Queen.

1981: Prince Charles visited the island shortly after announcing his engagement to Lady Diana Spencer and ahead of his wedding in July.

1983: Prince Charles and Princess Diana and their young son Prince William flew to Alice Springs to embark on an extended two-week tour.

1988: Charles and Diana returned to visit to mark Australia’s bicentenary of white settlement in 1788.

1994: Prince Charles visited Australia alone, the visit was memorable for the moment when he was giving a speech in Darling Harbor during Australia Day celebrations, and a young man – David Kang – fired two blanks from a pistol at him. Charles was unharmed and was taken off stage.

2012: Prince Charles traveled with Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, in November 2012 as part of an extended visit to Papua New Guinea, Australia and New Zealand on behalf of the Queen in her Diamond Jubilee year.

2015: Prince Charles and Camilla visited Adelaide, Canberra, Sydney, Albany and Perth

2018: The royal couple visited Sydney and then the Gold Coast to open the Commonwealth Games.