A girl diagnosed with Leukaemia has miraculously made it to her sixth birthday after she was told she would die by the age of two.

Mother Renee Nel moved her family of four from a rural farm in South Africa to Australia when her 14-month-old girl Linke was diagnosed with Leukaemia.

She emailed 130 doctors around the world and her only response, 24-hours later, came from Dr Luciano Dalla-Pozza at Westmead Hospital, in Sydney's West, according to Weekend Today.

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Linke Nel (pictured) was given just a few months to live when she was diagnosed with Leukemia at the age of 14 months

The brave mother told the program she consulted Google, and that's where she found Dr Luce, who placed Linke on a clinical trial.

'As any parent would, when you're told your child is going to die, I just couldn't accept that, I thought I'd fight with everything until the end and there has to be something out there, there has to be some treatment that could help Linke,' she said.

'It definitely wasn't easy, but when you are not given a choice, when that's the only option you have to give your child a chance...we just had to do it.'

Her mother Renee emailed 130 doctors around the world and her only response, 24-hours later, came from Dr Luciano Dalla-Pozza at Westmead Hospital

Linke was placed within remission within a month of starting the clinical trial in 2014, and by 2015 had finished her treatments.

'It's hard as a family, and you know a lot of things run through your head, but it becomes your one and only primary focus, and you know, you just try and help her as much as you can,' mother Renee told the Nine Network.

The Cancer Medical Research Institute, which is behind Jeans for Genes Day, provided her family with support for the move.

Linke has become one of the faces of the national event, in it's 25th anniversary year, and you can read more about her story and others on the website.

Linke (pictured) was placed within remission within a month of starting the clinical trial in 2014, and by 2015 had finished her treatment