A TEENAGE girl who has been battling cancer for a decade has seen miraculous results after trialling a new drug.
At 14 years old, Mikayla Beames has been fighting cancer for most of her life.
The teenager, who lives in Childrey near Wantage, was diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumour at the age of just four and has since been through a number of rounds of chemotherapy as well as several other forms of difficult treatment.
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Despite that, she set up a charity called Team Mikayla which has helped to grant the wishes of hundreds of other children also fighting cancer.
For that work, she has won several awards and met Prince Harry twice.
However, in November, Mikayla got her own wish granted when she was put on a new treatment for her cancer called 'inhibitors', which help the body recognise and attack cancer cells.
The latest scans of Mikayla's brain, shared by her mother Natasha, show that the tumour has shrunk by a half.
The teenager's family are now thrilled after her turnaround and, in an emotional interview with this paper, her mother said she has been waiting for these results for ten years.
Ms Beames said: "Mikayla was diagnosed with a large tumour in her brain when she was very young.
"She was very quickly started on to chemotherapy and we have had to do six different rounds of it because the tumour just kept growing.
"Now she is 14, so it has been a very long-winded, hard and draining battle.
"We ran out of ideas of what we can do with the tumour – but there is a new treatment called inhibitors and Mikayla was granted it on the NHS."
Ms Beames said Mikayla was the first child to try the inhibitors treatment at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford.
She went on: "We have waited ten years to get those answers, it has been a long road.
"We just kept getting bad news after more bad news, so it is so overwhelming and exciting that the tumour has shrunk by a half.