Weekend Herald

Kiwi travels 20,000km to save her eye

State-of-the-art procedure in Liverpool can kill tumour with minimal side-effects

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A young Kiwi woman was in shock when her doctor told her a mole on her eye had turned cancerous and would need to be removed.

Or, she could travel nearly 20,000km to England, for a state-ofthe-art procedure not available in New Zealand.

Nicole Williams was one of just five Kiwis funded by the Ministry of Health for proton beam radiothera­py in 10 years.

The 20-year-old, who grew up in Matamata, had a tiny mole on her eye since she was about seven. Williams, a second-year animal science student at Massey University, saw a specialist annually in Hamilton and although the mole was growing slightly each year, was told not to worry.

“It never really affected my vision. It was like a mole you can get anywhere on your body. They said there was only a tiny chance it could turn into something bad.”

After moving to Oamaru when she was 16, she started seeing specialist­s at Dunedin Hospital.

During her annual check-up in August last year, her doctor was concerned the mole was growing into the

gutter of her eye, where the blood vessels were. Specialist Dr Harry Bradshaw became involved, and a few days later told Williams and her mother the news they had been dreading: the mole had become cancerous.

As it was near the blood vessels there were concerns it could spread to the rest of her body. Either her eye would need to be removed, or she could seek specialist treatment at a clinic in England. “I went into complete shock,” Williams told the Weekend Herald. “I went from thinking it was nothing bad, to thinking maybe a simple procedure, to, ‘I could lose my eye’. I immediatel­y wanted to look into the treatment rather than lose my eye.”

Bradshaw had previously sent another patient for successful treatment at the UK Eye Proton Therapy Centre in the Clatterbri­dge Cancer Centre in Wirral, near Liverpool.

The treatment was an extremely precise form of low-energy radiothera­py, ideal for killing cancer cells without damaging critical tissue in the eye close to the tumour.

The Ministry of Health can fund treatment there out of a special highcost treatment pool for one-off treatments not otherwise funded by the public health system.

There were 10 treatments funded from the pool in 2018, and generally around 10 to 15 cases were funded per year. Five New Zealanders have been funded for proton beam radiothera­py since 2008. On December 1, Williams and her parents Christine and Bret flew over to England where, after some preparator­y treatment, she received four sessions of proton beam therapy over a four-day period, each lasting 30 seconds.

Consultant proton physicist Dr Andrzej Kacperek said the treatment produced a precise proton radiation which was tailored to a particular patient lesion.

“Due to the sub-millimetri­c precision of the treatment, the patient sits on a special chair which can perform the necessary minute movements necessary.

“The patient has one visit for preparatio­n which includes maskmaking with a mouth bite, followed by planning to optimise the treatment for each individual patient – to kill the tumour with the least possible side-effects.” In Williams’ case they only needed to penetrate the eye

5mm deep, which left the rest of the eye relatively healthy.

Williams said the treatment was painless. “I was awake the entire time. I could not feel a thing.”

Back home in Oamaru, her eye was now a little inflamed and sore, but she had been told it was normal.

Williams did not know if the treatment had been successful yet. She would be having check-ups every three months to see if it was growing still, or shrinking.

“It is a little weird not knowing if it has worked. We were told there was a

95 per cent success rate, so I am just trying not to focus on that slight chance it hasn’t worked.”

Williams said she was incredibly grateful to all of those involved in her care and wanted to share her story to raise awareness about the treatment.

 ?? Photo / Clatterbri­dge Cancer Centre ?? Michael Neilson Nicole Williams is one of just five Kiwis funded by the Ministry of Health for proton beam radiothera­py in 10 years.
Photo / Clatterbri­dge Cancer Centre Michael Neilson Nicole Williams is one of just five Kiwis funded by the Ministry of Health for proton beam radiothera­py in 10 years.
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