A British Paralympic hopeful claims she lost her place on the team while receiving mental health treatment in the hospital after being gang-raped.

Cassie Cava, 26, was favored to win a medal for snowboarding at the Winter Olympics in March but withdrew from the selection process over a lack of support.

The athlete claims she was left feeling suicidal over the treatment she received from coaches and senior figures at British Parasnowsport and said it was “worse than being raped.”

Cava, who was born with two club feet, was attacked and raped at an undisclosed location in Europe as she walked home in 2013.

She says her bosses made her feel “worthless” and “like they want me to be un-raped,” the Telegraph reports.

An investigation has been launched into the allegations of bullying and discrimination made by Cava.

She said: “They say that opening up about something and not getting support is the second trauma or the betrayal.

“They really made me feel that what had happened meant I couldn’t go on and do anything. They made me feel really bad for opening up about my mental health and talking about it.

“It was horrible and I’ve really struggled over the last six months. I’ve been really low and being made to feel like that and being made to feel so worthless was awful.”

The 2013 attack came as Cava walked home late at night.

She never fully reported the horror but returned home and embarked on a medical degree at King’s College London in a bid to put her ordeal behind her.

But her studies were halted in 2014 when her leg was amputated below the knee, so she instead focused on becoming the first female para-snowboarder to represent Britain at the Pyeongchang 2018 Games.

She told her coaches about the rape at the end of 2016 — claiming she had begun to feel unsafe as the only woman on the team.

Cava claims when she told them what had happened, one senior figure asked: “Do you want to hang yourself?”

Among her allegations is that she begged to train and live with other female athletes, but she was instead forced to train, eat and sleep in the same place as the all-male team.

In February last year, Cava was admitted to a mental hospital and diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder related to the gang rape and loss of her leg.

But while she was in the hospital, she says, she was told her UK sport funding would be taken away because of “behavioral issues.”

It was later reinstated after an appeal, but after Cava was again denied her pleas for another woman to join her — leaving her believing she wasn’t going to be supported “in any way.”

She says she began to feel so low, she self-harmed and was left feeling suicidal, adding: “I was met with such horrible treatment. It was worse than being in the hospital, it was worse than being raped.”

A UK Sport spokesman said they were working with organizations to support “Cassie’s ambition” to compete until she “chose to remove herself from British Parasnowsport’s program earlier this year.”

They added: “Athlete welfare is of the utmost importance to all of us. British Parasnowsport and UK Sport have jointly commissioned Sport Resolutions UK to produce an independent investigation and finding of fact into the allegations raised by Cassie Cava and therefore we are unable to comment further at this stage.”

A British Parasnowsport spokesperson said: “We would caution against any conclusions being drawn by others not in possession of all the facts.”

“As the investigation is ongoing, we are not able to expand further at this time.”