Cancer patient given just a year to live BEATS the disease thanks to pioneering stem cell treatment
Kye Eastwood, 24, travelled to the US for the new therapy, after NHS doctors warned they could do no more for him
He was given just one year to live after doctors in the UK ran out of treatment options.
Cancer patient Kye Eastwood, was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma in 2012.
But when a tumour in his chest stopped responding to treatment, and specialists discovered the disease had spread, they prepared Kye and his family for the worst.
But, four years on, and the 24-year-old has received the news he dared never to dream of - he is cancer-free.
After hearing the NHS had run out of options, Kye's family remained resolute, researching alternatives and new treatments that might help.
Their search led them to a hospital in Houston, Texas.
After discovering a pioneering new stem cell therapy that was on offer across the pond, Kye's desperate mum Amanda launched a desperate fundraising appeal.
Strangers, family and friends donated, raising more than £30,000 to send Kye for treatment in the US.
Experts at the American clinic diagnosed Kye with a rare form of lymphoma - mediastinal B-cell lymphoma, which affects the lymph nodes in the central part of a patient's chest, between their lungs.
While in America, Kye underwent a T-cell transplant, from stem cells donated by his sister, Rebecca.
He continued to travel back and forth to the clinic, where doctors revealed his tumour was continuing to shrink.
Last Tuesday, Kye and his mum Amanda, flew out to the US for another appointment.
It was then the 24-year-old's doctors emailed to reveal he had beaten the disease.
Mum Amanda said: "Kye and I were in a mall and I went to the restroom.
"When I came out, Kye kept saying 'let's go, let's go'.
"He didn't want to tell me in the middle of the mall in case I screamed or started to cry."
WHAT IS T-CELL TRANSPLANT THERAPY AND HOW CAN IT BEAT CANCER?
Lymphoma is the most common form of blood cancer.
There are two main forms of lymphoma - Hodgkin lymphoma and non-Hodgin lymphoma.
Lymphoma occurs when key white blood cells in the immune system - known as lymphocytes - grow and multiply uncontrollably.
Cancerous lymphocytes can travel all over the body, attacking the lymph nodes, spleen, bone marrow, blood and other organs, forming a tumour.
T-cell transplants involve transplanting stem cells from the donor, in Kye's case his sister Rebecca, to the patient.
The aim is to help boost and re-build the patient's own immune system, allowing the body to better fight the disease.
"When we got back into the car, he said he had something to tell me and not to get upset and I instantly thought the worst as he'd been a while having his scan done.