Yorkshire Post

Mother defies infertilit­y fears to give birth after breakthrou­gh treatment for cancer

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A YOUNG woman who almost died of cancer has become one of the first in the UK to give birth following an innovative treatment.

Sammy Gray, 26, feared chemothera­py had left her infertile but has gone on to have a son after CAR-T cell therapy trained her body to fight back against the disease.

Ms Gray first experience­d chest pains and night sweats in 2018 shortly after the birth of her first child, a daughter called Harper.

Worried that it may be a blood clot, doctors discovered a mass on her chest which was diagnosed as non Hodgkin’s lymphoma, an uncommon cancer that develops in the lymphatic system.

Ms Gray underwent chemothera­py and radiothera­py, which cut the size of the tumour, but then the cancer progressed.

By June 2019, she was out of treatment options but medics at the Christie NHS Foundation Trust in Manchester decided to try CAR-T cell therapy, which was only approved on the NHS in 2018.

CAR-T (chimeric antigen receptor T-cell) is a type of immunother­apy which involves reprogramm­ing the patient’s own immune system cells. These cells then work to target the cancer. The treatment carries risks but has managed to cure some patients, even those with quite advanced cancers and where other treatment options have failed.

Ms Gray, who is from Blackpool in Lancashire, gave a blood sample that was sent to the US where her T-cells were geneticall­y modified.

These were then put back into her body via a drip in September, with the hope they would boost her immune system’s natural response to cancer.

The gruelling treatment made

Ms Gray feel very ill but, after a month, she was allowed to go home.

The treatment worked and three, six and 12-month scans gave her the all-clear, showing no signs of cancer. Cancer treatments can leave women infertile and Ms Gray did not have periods for a year. But, along with her partner, Daley, she wanted a second child to complete her family, and so sought approval from the NHS for IVF fertility treatment.

The couple had just started the process when they conceived naturally. Their son Walter was born on February 23.

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