When 3-year-old Victorian boy Ryder Grace developed a low-grade fever and a limp, doctors initially believed he had a virus. The little boy was taken to multiple GPs and was instructed to take Nurofen.
โAt first he just started limping randomly without there being any real pain, he had a low-grade fever that would come and go,โ his mother, Katherine Grace, told Yahoo7 News.
โI took him to the GP eight times in total, they just said he had a virus and an unrelated strain.โ
Ms Grace feared her son could have leukemia, but blood tests came back negative. Five weeks later, doctors at the Royal Childrenโs Hospital took bone marrow samples via a biopsy and diagnosed Ryder with Metastatic Neuroblastoma. The rare childhood cancer affects just one in 100,000.

โBy the time we took him to RCH, Ryderโs cancer had grown very aggressively,โ Ms Grace explained on the familyโs GoFundMe page. โIt had spread to every part of his skeleton, much of his soft tissue and in to his bone marrow. He was in pain, everywhere.โ
Ryder has since undergone seven cycles of chemotherapy, had a bone marrow transplant and spent most of the past 6 months in hospital.
But despite his positive response to initial treatment, neuroblastoma โis a notoriously recurrent cancer,โ Ms Grace said.
โEven with this good response he has a 50% chance of relapsing, possibly even while still in the latter part of his treatment (weโve been given one opinion that Ryder may be โas lowโ as a 30% chance to relapse, but this is an opinion only).
โParents of neuroblastoma children live in fear of every sore limb, every fever, every suspicious symptom, and are terrified of what they might hear with each new scan.โ

Ms Grace said their treatment options in Australia are exhausted if Ryder does indeed relapse. However, there is a trial in the US that could be lifesaving. The 12-month trial to test the vaccine is available at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre in New York and begins at a hefty US$160,000.
โInitial dataโฆis showing a great deal of promise โ significantly extending remission periods for children who have already relapsed and are therefore at a much higher risk,โ Ms Grace wrote. โMany are still with us today.โ
The family has launched a GoFundMe page to raise money for the expensive treatment and cover travel costs. You can donate to the page here.