Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Lyell Tweed & Will Hayward

How a little bruise on a baby lead to a devastating diagnosis

It is the news that every parent dreads.

The family of 13-month-old toddler Harper Walker noticed a bruise on her eyelid but put it down to a small accident while playing. Mum Jenny Huddart and dad Adam Walker grew more concerned after the bruise kept growing and started to push her eye out of shape. They could tell that something was wrong and they sought medical help.

Following tests the family of seven were told just after Easter that Harper had neuroblastoma -a rare form of cancer that affects around only 100 children per year. Further tests would go to show this was a stage four, high risk, cancer metastases in multiple locations across her body.

Read more: Mum's warning after being told by doctors not to worry

Speaking to the Manchester Evening News Jenny said: "Harper was born with hip dysplasia and to to be in a cast until last December and started moving more after that. We noticed in mid-February a little black dot near her eye but because she had been starting to move around more we thought she'd just hit herself with a toy.

"It started changing a bit but we thought maybe she had just rubbed it. But, then we noticed her eye starting to move up, like she had a lazy eye, and we took her to the doctors.

"At first the doctor wasn't concerned and said to come back in two weeks if it hadn't gone but by that point it would have been five weeks. The day after we called to get a referral to an eye specialist but that was going to take another week as it had kept changing shape so we called 111 who told us to go to Salford Royal.

"They straight away told us we needed more tests but they don't have the right eye specialists at that hospital so sent us to Manchester Eye Hospital. We went in on Good Friday and Harper was admitted for tests and went home.

"On the Monday we got the phone call from the doctor asking us to go in where we were told they had found a lump in her sinuses. And then a biopsy confirmed and we were told Harper had stage four cancer. Further tests showed it was an aggressive form of Neuroblastoma."

The bruise under Harper's eye began to change shape and move her eye after several weeks (Jenny Huddart)

After bring told, Jenny from Swinton said: "It was as if it wasn't happening. We felt numb. We started Googling things even though you're not supposed to and saw the stats for this which aren't great.

"Apparently it's something that originally grows while she was a foetus, but there was no way of knowing about it until the little bruise appeared. We were told by people who've been doctors in this area for 33 years that they've never seen it present like this, we knew something wasn't right when it started to move her eye. It's just awful."

Harper then began a brutal 18 month course of treatment with chemotherapy and surgery. She will also receive stem cell treatment and radiotherapy as part of this.

They are looking to get Harper treatment at the pioneering Sloan Kettering cancer centre in New York to give her a new form of treatment that increases her chances of survival up to 60 to 70 per cent. However, the treatment alone for this costs serious money with estimates putting it at more than £280,000 with multiple trips over to the US.

Harper with her four siblings (Jenny Huddart)

Dad Adam set-up a JustGiving page on May 28 where they are aiming to raise up to £300,000 to help fund this potentially life saving treatment. In this short space of time it has raised nearly £13,000 with Jenny saying the family are "overwhelmed" by the support they have received so far.

"We reached out and spoke to someone who has gone through this too and they have been so helpful. But, they said you have to travel out a lot as well as the costs of the care so it is very expensive, but we want to give Harper the best chance we possibly can," she said.

Jenny added: "It's just heartbreaking. She's a dead happy child who's always smiling. We really want to give her the best chance to fight this.

"Over the past month we've only had six nights at home, with the rest of the time at the Manchester Children's Hospital. The staff and everyone there have been absolutely amazing and all the parents there help each other out. The people are just wonderful.

"It's been very difficult for the whole family, especially Harper's three brothers and sister. It's very unsettling for them, being in and out of hospital. But, we're trying to be as positive as possible for them, not going into the full extent of what is going on yet.

"The doctors have been really pleased with how it's gone so far so we're trying to be positive as possible with the kids. We're just all still coming to terms with it really, taking each day as it comes, there are good and bad days. We've just got to hope and pray."

To read and keep up with the full fundraiser, visit the Just Giving page here.

Read more:

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.