← NewsAll
Baby photo showing a white glow led to an eye cancer diagnosis
Summary
A mother in Wales noticed a white glow in a flash photo of her eight-month-old daughter; clinicians later diagnosed bilateral retinoblastoma and the child received chemotherapy followed by ongoing laser therapy.
Content
Bronte Richards noticed a white glow in a photograph of her eight-month-old daughter Raye after a camera flash. That image contributed to further checks and a diagnosis of bilateral retinoblastoma, a rare childhood eye cancer. Raye received six months of chemotherapy and has continued to receive laser therapy. Doctors report the tumours now show little or no activity.
Key facts:
- Bronte first observed a white glow in Raye's right eye in a flash photograph when Raye was eight months old.
- Initial assessments by a GP and an early eye specialist did not flag cancer, but a senior eye doctor later diagnosed bilateral retinoblastoma.
- Raye underwent six months of chemotherapy and has continued with laser therapy; clinicians report the tumours are currently being managed and show little activity.
- Richard Ashton of the Childhood Eye Cancer Trust said the case highlights retinoblastoma awareness among health professionals and, as reported, mentioned advising assessment by a GP or optician when concerns arise.
Summary:
Raye's treatment progressed from chemotherapy to ongoing laser sessions and clinicians report the tumours now show little or no activity. Undetermined at this time.
