The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Brave Leva is chosen to launch awards scheme

Perthshire youngster battling back to health after surgery to remove tumour is honoured by Cancer Research UK

- Jamie buchaN jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

A mother has told how her world turned upside down when her little girl’s tummy ache turned out to be an orange-sized tumour.

Perthshire youngster Leva Stewart went to her local GP clutching her swollen belly “like a pregnant woman”.

After an anxious week-long wait for test results, the family was told the toddler had a rare type of cancer which impacts on particular types of muscle cells.

The disease, rhabdomyos­arcoma, affects around 60 children in the UK each year.

Brave Leva, who turns three on Friday, is now battling back to health, with just one more cycle of radiothera­py to go and a recent scan revealing no evidence of cancer left in her body.

There was more good news for the inspiratio­nal Blackford youngster as she has been picked to launch a major awards scheme for Cancer Research UK in Scotland.

Leva received a CRUK Kids and Teens Star Award for demonstrat­ing remarkable courage during her gruelling eight-month battle.

Parents Roxanne Hausrath and Adam Stewart, both 30, said they are immensely proud of her.

“Leva is our star, remaining incredibly bright, bubbly, confident and caring throughout everything,” Roxanne said.

“Our lives changed overnight when Leva was diagnosed with cancer and we had no control over that.

“Leva’s third birthday will be special. It will be a chance to get everyone together who has supported us through the most traumatic year of our lives and say thank you.”

Dental nurse Roxanne said the first major shock came on April 26, when a scan at Ninewells Hospital showed what medics suspected was a tumour in Leva’s abdomen.

“We’d taken Leva to the doctor as her tummy has swollen up and was hurting her,” she said.

“She’d even started holding her tummy to support it like a pregnant woman would do when she went to pick something up.

“I’d noticed the veins in her tummy were really extended and blue, which raised alarm bells for me too.”

Leva was sent to the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh for further tests and on May 8 the family were told that a 10cm tumour was pushing against a kidney.

After the first round of chemothera­py, a scan revealed the tumour had grown by another 6cm and emergency surgery was required.

On June 27, Leva underwent a seven-hour operation, which saw 99% of the tumour removed.

“Leva had been a strong wee lady all through the surgery,” said Roxanne.

“The tumour had been attached to her bladder, so they’d had to take a small part of her bladder away but mended it well.

“They’d only been able to remove a small part which was attached to her bowel. It was incredible for us to hear that they’d got so much of the tumour out.”

Leva was out of intensive care within 48 hours.

“Very soon she was sitting up in bed, laughing and playing. She healed brilliantl­y,” said her mum.

She faces just four more weeks of radiothera­py at the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh and can then look forward to being a flower girl at her parents’ wedding in 2019.

Adam proposed to Roxanne on the eve of Leva’s life-saving surgery.

“We tried to turn what felt like the worst day of our lives in to a positive,” said Roxanne. “Caring for a seriously ill child makes or breaks you as a couple. Adam has been my rock through the most stressful, traumatic time of my life and I try to stay positive to get him through.

“Sadly, every time we go back to the hospital we meet a new family with a child who has just been diagnosed with cancer and has so much of this to come.

“We’re no experts but are keen to do everything we can to support other families going through it.”

Little Leva Stewart has coped with much in her short life but is now battling back from a devastatin­g cancer diagnosis. Thankfully, unlike far too many cancer sufferers, the Perthshire tot is able to look forward to a bright future.

However, her nearest and dearest know only too well just how horrific cancer can be and are determined to help other young families affected by the disease.

Their determinat­ion is an example to us all.

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 ?? Pictures: Lesley Martin. ?? Little star: Leva Stewart, top, and with mum Roxanne Hausrath.
Pictures: Lesley Martin. Little star: Leva Stewart, top, and with mum Roxanne Hausrath.

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