I was cured of one of the deadliest forms of cancer after trialling a new drug… my brain cancer is gone

A father who suffered from the world’s most deadly brain cancer was cleared after being received an experimental treatment.
The 43 -year -old Ben Trotman, who was diagnosed with Glioblastoma in October 2022, does not show a symptom of disease after an immunotherapy drug in a world in the first two years ago.
Most patients with aggressive brain cancer form typically die within 12 to 18 months.
Dr. Medical Oncologist Dr. Paul Mulholland said: ‘Making a clear screening with Glioblastoma, especially when it does not have a tracking surgery that is planned to remove the entire tumor that can be seen in scans.
“We hope that I will keep the tumor away from the tumor-and we are happy to see so far.”
Mr. Trotman married his wife Emily two months after immunotherapy treatment in 2023, and his daughter Mabel was born in April.
Someone’s father said: ‘This diagnosis was the most traumatic experience. We were struggling with the fact that Ben went to live for months from being apparently perfect to be healthy.
If we hadn’t met Dr Mulholland, it would be for us. Otherwise, we felt that we had a lucky break in a destructive situation. ‘
The 43 -year -old Ben Trotman, who was diagnosed with Glioblastoma in October 2022, does not show a symptom of disease after an immunotherapy drug in a world in the first two years ago.

Most patients with aggressive brain cancer typically die in 12 to 18 months
Mr. Trotman continued the treatment of existing standard radiotherapy and chemotherapy. It also enters the three -month boxes that continue to become clear.
“We don’t know what the future is, but Emily and I gave some hope to achieve immunotherapy treatment and these encouraging scanning results,” he said.
‘We focus on rebuilding the life we think we lost and enjoying being a parent’.
University College London Hospital National Neurology and Neurosurgy Hospital hearing, the same medicine closed due to lack of recruitment is following the previous drug.
However, Dame Siobhain McDonagh deputy, sister Baroness McDonagh, led a donation collection campaign to collect more than £ more than £ more than 1 million to meet the costs of new hearings after died in 2023.
Dame Siobhain said: ‘My dear sister Margaret, Glioblastoma diagnosed for decades for decades to discover that there was no progress in the treatment of brain cancer.
“ Change this was Margaret’s last campaign and it was a campaign I continued in memory.
‘I am very grateful to many people who bring Margaret together and help to collect money and campaign for this new hearing and we call Margaret’s hearing.’
Dr. Paul Mulholland, ‘When I met Margaret to me’ what can I do to support you to treat this disease? ‘He said.

Dr. With Paul Mulholland, Dame Siobhan McDonagh. MP (right) launched more than 1 million £ money collection campaign to cover the costs of new hearings after his sister Baroness McDonagh died in 2023 from Glioblastom in 2023.
‘I am incredibly grateful to Siobhain, which led to this new clinical study opening for patients with this most aggressive brain cancer, which has such a bad prognosis in the memory of his sister’s memory, and most patients survived only nine months after the diagnosis.
‘The most important element of this study is that patients’ immune systems will increase before, when they are appropriate and are good enough to tolerate immunotherapy.
“ We take everything we have learned from previous trials to this new study and we are already planning to follow -up.
‘My goal is to find a treatment for glioblastoma.’
National brain attractiveness is currently financed two tasks to support Dr Mulholland’s research.
Treatment will take place in the clinical research facility of NIHR UCLH and at National Neurology and Neurosurgy Hospital.