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  • How old do you reckon these trees are, mate?

  • Um, 75, 50 years.

  • 50 years old?

  • Our son was diagnosed with cancer at the age of 5. We were devastated by the news. It was

  • a bit of a shock to us. He has been through very significant treatment, which is very,

  • very hard on the young kids. The good news is that Aidan has survived his treatment and

  • is back at school now enjoying himself, but there are plenty of parents that aren't so

  • lucky. There are terrible situations in hospital where many kids are losing their life each

  • week.

  • Neuroblastoma is one of the most lethal forms of childhood cancer. One of the problems with

  • neuroblastoma is children that have been diagnosed with highgrade disease have little in the

  • way of treatment, so we've developed a new class of anticancer compounds which target

  • the structure of the cancer cell.

  • Professor Peter Gunning and Dr Justine Stehn are working on a program that may change the

  • face of cancer medicine. So, the way this works, it's like watching

  • a building collapse on television. We're actually dynamiting the insides of the cell and causing

  • its overall structure to collapse, really destroying the internal girders, the struts,

  • the supports on the inside -- the cell collapses, the cell dies.

  • The reality is it's the same structure that you see in essentially every kind of cancer

  • cell. So we can't just go after blastoma here, we can go after any kind of tumour.

  • The challenge with cancer research for children is that governments and corporations are generally

  • only wanting to fund to the next phase. So when you have people like Peter Gunning who

  • have a theory about cell structures and want to take something in a new direction there

  • is very little funding.

  • The Kids Cancer Project has been funding this research now for almost 10 years. For people

  • like my wife and I, that gives us hope because we're looking for the new thing to help save

  • our children from this dreadful disease.

How old do you reckon these trees are, mate?

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