The Jewish Chronicle

Trainer’s cancer cure promise to dying husband

- BY MARCUS DYSCH

A CELEBRITY fitness trainer has told how she promised her dying husband that she would battle to help find a cure for cancer after they were both stricken with the disease.

Nicki Waterman ( above), who has trained Denise van Outen, All Saints and Kelly Brook, is recovering from a highly invasive form of brain tumour.

After losing her husband, Dennis last year, and her brother Colin Lehmann last month, to cancer, the 52-year-old is now challengin­g the government to increase funding and extend treatment options like the immunother­apy that saved her life.

Ms Waterman, a member of Belsize Square Synagogue in north London, supported an event at Speaker’s House in Parliament on Wednesday as part of Brain Tumour Awareness Month.

She explained: “I want more clinical trials and funding so that people can have the same opportunit­y for treatment that I did. It’s expensive treatment but I think we have a good chance of convincing the government. I’m very confident that we can get the funding.”

When the 52-year-old was diagnosed with severe glioblasto­ma last year, doctors expected her to be dead by February due to the aggressive nature of the cancer. But she was given revolution­ary private treatment for the “incurable” tumour after meeting an oncologist who had been researchin­g a new combinatio­n of drugs.

Ms Waterman and her husband had at one stage last year been so ill that they considered taking their lives at Dignitas in Switzerlan­d.

“I was very unlucky to get the tumour. I think it was the stress of my husband being sick that brought it on. He was the love of my life. I said to him that I would try to find a cure,” she said.

Ms Waterman hopes Parliament will discuss funding for brain tumour research. More than 120,000 signed a petition calling for a debate on the issue and Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt is believed to be supporting the campaign.

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