Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jul 13
Kinver Father Seeks £200,000 for Eye Cancer Treatment After Routine Test Reveals Terminal Disease
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jul 13

Kinver Father Seeks £200,000 for Eye Cancer Treatment After Routine Test Reveals Terminal Disease

2 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jul 13

Summary

  • Jez Bridges, 59, was diagnosed with terminal uveal melanoma after a routine eye test last July found a mole on his eye, and he is now trying to raise £200,000 for private treatment.
  • An OCT scan at his optician led to the diagnosis even though he had no symptoms; six months later, doctors said the rare eye cancer had spread to his liver and gave him one to two years to live.
  • Chemosaturation — priced at £40,000 to £46,000 a session — is his only option to potentially extend his life, but it is not available on the NHS.
  • NICE says the procedure can be used with oversight but cited uncertainties over safety and efficacy, while Ocular Melanoma UK said a recent study showed benefit in nine out of 10 patients.
  • Bridges and his family are also using the appeal to stress regular eye tests, saying the scan gave them valuable time to prepare and make memories together.

Insights

When a treatment helps 90% of patients, why must families crowdfund £200,000 for it?
If a 60-second eye scan can detect deadly cancer, why isn't it a standard NHS test?
What silent killers can a routine eye exam uncover before it is too late?