Woman diagnosed with brain tumour after eye test Published duration 29 August 2019

image copyright Christel Callow image caption Christel Callow, pictured with partner Richard Edwards, had celebrated her 26th birthday two days before her eye test uncovered problems

A woman was diagnosed with a brain tumour after an optician spotted abnormalities at an eye test.

Christel Callow, 26, from Shropshire, is now raising £62,000 for proton beam therapy that is not widely available on the NHS.

She has had most of the tumour removed but has been told the therapy will target what is left more effectively than radiotherapy.

NHS England said it was only available to eligible patients.

Miss Callow had been having headaches for about two months when she booked the appointment on 22 July.

There, the opticians found pressure that had caused a haemorrhage in her right eye.

An MRI scan at Royal Shrewsbury Hospital revealed a tennis-ball sized tumour and, a week after the initial eye test, she underwent surgery at Royal Stoke Hospital.

image copyright Christel Callow image caption Christel has had the majority of the tumour removed through surgery, but needs further treatment

"They said I had been living with it for a long time... if it hadn't been found by the optician, I would have probably died, I would have collapsed or had a seizure or a stroke," she said.

Miss Callow was told she had a fast-growing cancer called anaplastic astrocytoma , and would need radiotherapy - but the radiotherapy could damage other parts of her brain, affecting her speech and movement.

image copyright Getty Images image caption Proton beam therapy enables a dose of high energy protons to be precisely targeted at a tumour

Her family researched alternatives and found proton beam therapy , which uses high energy protons precisely targeted at a tumour to treat specific types of cancer.

Miss Callow said she did not qualify for the treatment on the NHS and had been raising money to have it at the Rutherford Cancer Centre in South Wales.

A spokesperson for the private clinic said the NHS used the therapy to treat "certain types of brain tumours", while the centre advised patients with a "range of cancers beyond those funded by the NHS" on the therapy's potential benefits.

An NHS England spokesperson said: "The NHS does fund proton beam therapy when it is shown to be clinically effective for rare tumours but it may not be the best treatment option for patients."

Within 24 hours of a funding push, Miss Callow said she had raised more than £4,000, adding friends were arranging a fundraising event.

Miss Callow said she "never expected" the response.