Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

‘Help my princess live life free from this evil disease’

- By Lowri Chant lchant@thekmgroup.co.uk @Lowrichant

A mum has launched a desperate appeal to help save her two-yearold daughter’s life after she was diagnosed with a brain tumour.

The aggressive growth, which cannot be operated on in the UK, has already robbed Poppy Martin of her sight in one eye.

Now, mum Elle, 21, faces a race against time to raise funds for surgery abroad before the tumour causes any more permanent damage.

Since the devastatin­g diagnosis in July last year, when Poppy was just 16 months old, the toddler has endured 58 rounds of chemothera­py and visited 10 different hospitals.

Former Archbishop’s School pupil Elle is aiming to raise £300,000 to fund travel, accommodat­ion and surgery to remove the tumour in the United States.

The single mum, who is a fulltime carer to Poppy, described the moment she realised her daughter was poorly.

She said: “On July 5 last year she had a cold and I noticed her

‘We walked in and saw children with no hair and tubes attached to them. I thought ‘is this what Poppy has ahead of her?’

eyes loo ked a lot heavier than normal. It turns out the pressure of the tumour was pushing her left eye forward and making her squint.

“I took her to the children’s centre at Kent and Canterbury Hospital, who referred us to the William Harvey where a specialist looked at Poppy’s eye with a torch.

“The doctor said she had an elevation behind her left eye. I didn’t know what it all meant. I assumed they meant a cyst or something, but the doctor looked at me and said ‘we’re not talking about a cyst’.”

An MRI scan at the QEQM in Margate two days later revealed the severity of Poppy’s condition, prompting medics to refer her to specialist cancer hospital The Royal Marsden, in London.

Elle explained: “Walking into the Royal Marsden was gobsmackin­g. We didn’t understand the extent of Poppy’s diagnosis at that point.

“We walked in and saw children with no hair and tubes attached to them. I thought ‘is this what Poppy has ahead of her?”

The tumour was caused by a genetic condition Poppy was born with called neurofibro­matosis type 1, which causes an overproduc­tion of cells.

Elle, who lives in Spire Avenue, Whitstable, with her parents, Joy and Reg, and her sister, Rebecca, continued: “The tumour has already taken most of the sight in Poppy’s left eye and is now growing towards the right eye.

“It is sitting on Poppy’s right temporal lobe, which affects memory, speech and non-verbal communicat­ion.

“We no longer have time on our side before the tumour does yet more irreversib­le damage, so we need to act fast.

“We are desperatel­y seeking help from doctors outside the UK who have more advanced treatments and are more specialise­d in surgery.

“This country can’t offer any more treatments that aren’t dangerousl­y toxic.

“The two drugs we’ve been offered are both for adults.

“Poppy would have to have them if the next scan shows it’s growing, and it would be a miracle if it’s not.”

She added: “Please help my little princess live a life free from this evil disease.”

The appeal has already raised m ore than £5,000 in a week.

To donate, visit www. justgiving.com/crowdfundi­ng/ poppysplea

 ??  ?? Poppy at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London
Poppy at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London
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