One mother who thought her itchy hands were a reaction to a new cleaning product was handed a deadly cancer diagnosis.
Maria Barry, 58, started having itchy and cracked hands at the first outbreak of Covid back in March 2020.
She initially thought it was down to a new cleaning product she was using.
But, two years later in April 2022, the nursery manager was diagnosed with bile duct cancer - a rare condition with around 1,000 new cases in the UK each year.
Maria has just three to six months to live without treatment.
The mum, who lives in Harrow, north west London with her children Nico, 32, Luca, 30, and Nadia, 27, is now fighting against the clock to fund lifesaving treatment.
She said: "The gene therapy treatment that I need isn’t available on the NHS and costs £16,500 a month privately so we are desperately trying to raise money using a GoFundMe page.
"Anything that we can get will go towards saving my life. My kids all live at home with me and I don’t have grandchildren yet. I’m not ready to die, I’m fighting to live."
For Maria, her issues began when her hands started to itch relentlessly.
"I’d had gallstones a couple of years prior and ended up having my gallbladder removed, but other than that I’d never had any health problems," she explained.
"During lockdown, I developed a condition where my hands cracked up and I had to wear gloves.
"I’d initially thought it was a reaction to a new cleaning product I’d bought to clean the cooker.
"They were so itchy and I was getting aches and pains in my elbows, joints, everywhere, and I was constantly on the phone with the doctor."
Due to lockdown, Maria could not get a face-to-face appointment so had to send her GP photos of her red and sore palms.
Over the next year, she was prescribed various steroid creams, gels and UV treatments but to no avail.
She said: "Nothing seemed to work and I was eventually referred to a dermatologist.
"It took a while to see them and, even then, they were suggesting new medication to try."
But Maria says her intuition was screaming at her, telling her this was more than itchy skin.
She said: "I just knew something was wrong. It had been months of trying different solutions and nothing had worked. Something had to be seriously wrong so I demanded a CT scan."
On Christmas Eve 2021, Maria was asked to go in Northwick Park Hospital for her results.
Fearing the worst, she took along her grown-up children Nico, who is not working, Luca, a salesman, and Nadia, a football centre manager, for support.
She said: "The news just completely shocked me. The doctors suspected I had a rare cancer and would need to undergo a biopsy.
"I was devastated and it completely ruined our Christmas. The entire time, I just kept worrying about what was to come."
After New Year, Maria had three biopsies which were all inconclusive.
"After the fourth biopsy, they confirmed they had found something malignant," she said.
"It was so rare that the doctors said they needed to run further tests to find out what type of cancer it was."
In April, Maria was officially diagnosed with bile duct cancer which starts in the bile duct and, in her case, after lying dormant for years, had now spread to her liver.
She said: "Doctors confirmed I had a 9cm mass known as intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma and I was offered chemotherapy which started in May."
Sadly, Maria struggled to cope with the treatment and she was put on chemo rest after suffering severe side effects.
She said: "I was so fatigued and sick that the doctors decided to put me on chemo rest, which I’m still on at the minute, because it was getting to the point where I thought the chemo was going to kill me."
No longer on treatment, Maria’s prognosis was bleak as doctors gave her just three to six months to live.
Desperate for an alternative, her daughter Nadia began searching for other options.
Maria said: "Nadia found a gene therapy trial that had recently been run at University College London Hospital.
"We enquired about it but, unfortunately, we were too late to take part."
Unlike chemotherapy, gene therapy only targets the cancer during treatment, which can mean there are fewer side effects for the patient, and Maria believes she would be likely to benefit from it.
She said: "The treatment isn’t available on the NHS but, right now, it’s my only chance at survival or prolonging my life.
"It costs around £16,500 a month, which we have been fundraising for."
After raising enough money for one month’s worth of treatment, last week Maria started the medication which consists of two tablets taken daily.
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