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This Mum Was Told To Give Her Sick Son Nurofen For Pain. It Turned Out To Be Cancer

This is heartbreaking

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.

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โ€œAt 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.

โ€œI 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 Childrenโ€™s Hospital took bone marrow samples via a biopsy and diagnosed Ryder with Metastatic Neuroblastoma. The rare childhood cancer affects just one in 100,000.

Ryder
(Credit: GoFundMe)
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โ€œBy the time we took him to RCH, Ryderโ€™s cancer had grown very aggressively,โ€ Ms Grace explained on the familyโ€™s GoFundMe page. โ€œIt 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 โ€œis a notoriously recurrent cancer,โ€ Ms Grace said.

โ€œEven with this good response he has a 50% chance of relapsing, possibly even while still in the latter part of his treatment (weโ€™ve been given one opinion that Ryder may be โ€œas lowโ€ as a 30% chance to relapse, but this is an opinion only).

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โ€œParents 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€

Gofundme
(Credit: GoFundMe)

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. 

โ€œInitial dataโ€ฆis 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. โ€œMany are still with us today.โ€

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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.

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