The parents of a five-year-old girl battling a rare cancer are appealing to the public to help raise £500,000 for potentially life-saving treatment abroad.
Like many girls her age, Florence Bark loves princesses and enjoys dressing up as her favourite Disney characters. She also told MailOnline she is also a big fan of ‘doggies’ and other animals.
But her world was shattered last month after being diagnosed with a rare form of the blood cancer leukaemia, called acute myeloid leukaemia.
Florence, from Corby in Northamptonshire, is waiting for a bone marrow transplant that is funded by the NHS.
But she has a rare gene mutation, found in only 10 per cent of cases, which means the treatment is predicted to fail.
If the transplant doesn’t work, Florence’s only chance will be for a pioneering procedure called CAR-T therapy that teaches her own immune system to fight off the disease.
But the NHS won’t pay for the procedure, forcing her family to turn to crowdfunding in preparation of getting her the treatment privately in either Singapore or the US.
This is the same treatment that cured Oscar Saxelby-Lee, the British boy who won the nation’s heart after his leukaemia battle went viral in 2018.
Five-old-old Florence Bark is like any other child her age and big fan of animated films and animals
Florence who loves to dress up like Elsa from Disney film Frozen has been diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia
Despite going through various treatments including chemotherapy Florence (standing) has bonded with Elaiya (lying down) another girl with the same cancer who is also from Northamptonshire and looking for a donor
Florence, pictured here on special trip to see Frozen a few weeks before her diagnosis. Her mother Stacey said medics originally suspected Florence had a range of childhood infections before the shocks blood cancer diagnosis
Strangers raised half a million pounds for Oscar’s treatment, and the Barks hope they can also count on the public’s generosity.
They said they will do everything in their power to help save their ‘beautiful princess’.
CAR-T therapy is personalised and involves reprogramming a patient’s immune system cells to directly attack cancerous tissue.
The therapy is available on the NHS for children and some adults with more common types of blood cancer.
Florence is one of just around 100 children diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia every year.
This cancer affects cells in the bone marrow, causing them to make too many white blood cells too quickly and releasing them underdeveloped into the bloodstream.
These underdeveloped white blood cells can then cause problems in the rest of the body.
This cancer is treated is with bone marrow transplant from a donor whose genetic markers are as close as possible to the patient’s after a course of chemotherapy.
Unfortunately, Florence has a rare gene rearrangement that affects less than 10 per cent of children with this type of cancer.
Medics have warned the family this makes her prognosis very poor even if a matching donor is found.
Her mother Stacey said Florence first started feeling unwell around the start of May, which she said was unusual as she tends to tough illnesses out.
‘Florence never ever complains about being poorly, she’s really got a high pain threshold,’ she said.
‘She started having a little bit of a cough which turned quite bad so we ended up taking her to urgent care.’
The 32-year-old mother was originally told it was likely to be croup but her daughter’s condition worsened.
Mrs Bark and Florence were sent back and forth by medics who suspected the five-year-old had everything from tonsillitis to an ear infection.
Then 15 days after originally seeking medical help, Mrs Bark, who works as a healthcare assistant, decided she had had enough.
‘She was just rolling around in pain in bed and I said, “I’m not having this there’s something not right”,’ she said.
Mrs Bark then took Florence to hospital on May 13 and refused to leave until medics did a blood test.
Adding to their woes, genetic testing confirmed Florence has rare gene rearrangement that affects less than 10 per cent of children with the cancer and meaning a stem cell transplant is less likely to be successful
The family have been advised to fundraise now in anticipation the transplant won’t cure her cancer so they can afford to get Florence CAR-T therapy, that the NHS won’t fund, overseas
Florence with her dad Andrew. The family say they will do everything in our power to help save their beautiful princess
While undergoing cancer treatment, Florence decided to donate her hair to the Little Princess Trust a charity that makes wigs for children and young people who lose their hair due to cancer
This test revealed that Florence had acute myeloid leukaemia.
Florence is scheduled to have a bone marrow transplant in the next five to six weeks though Mrs Bark said the NHS has only found a partial match amongst currently registered donors.
‘We want a really good match because her risk factors are so high…it’s not going to give her the best chance,’ she said.
‘Us doing this search is really the only hope we have for a successful bone marrow transplant.’
Mrs Bark and her husband Andrew, who works as a primary school head teacher, were also advised to start fundraising for treatment overseas now in anticipation that the transplant won’t work.
‘We were advised that our best option because of Florence’s prognosis is to start fundraising for the possibility that we will need to go,’ she said.
‘Her genetics give her a really high chance that the stem cells are going to fail’.
This prompted the family to set up a crowdfunding page now which has already raised over £121,000 so far.
While the family stated they originally wanted to keep Florence’s situation private, they were committed to doing everything they could to save their daughter.
‘We will do everything in our power to help save our beautiful princess and what we need to do now is ask for the kindness of others,’ they said.
If Florence’s transplant is successful and she is deemed to not be at risk of relapse, the family said the funds will be used for any ongoing care she needs or donated to cancer research or another family in similar circumstances.
They are also encouraging Britons to sign up to be a transplant donor to help not only Florence but all children who have this cancer.
Mrs Bark said: ‘People don’t realise how easy it is, it is just a cheek swab.’
If people are found to be match, they can be called to have an operation to gather bone marrow material for transplant with people needing to spend two days in hospital.
But Mrs Bark said this was a small price to potentially save a child’s life.
‘It’s a little bit of discomfort for a couple of days but you could save a life,’ she said.
People interested in becoming donors can do so by visiting the charity DKMS if they are over 30 or Anthony Nolan if they are under 30.
Generally, only 15 per cent of people diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia survive longer than five years, although survival rates are higher in younger patients.
Florence’s case echoes that of Oscar Saxelby-Lee, another British child whose family turned to fundraising to him the £500,000 needed for the CAR-T therapy in Singapore.
The family raised the money they needed in just three weeks and thankfully the treatment was successful with Oscar being declared cancer free in January 2020.
There are about 9,907 new cases of leukaemia of all types diagnosed in the UK each year, with 4,730 annual deaths from disease.
In the US there are about 60,650 new leukaemia cases per year, as well as 24,000 deaths.
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