Alder Hey Children's Hospital. He was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, a rare form of cancer with a 65% five-year survival rate, according to Cancer Research UK.
The teenager needed surgery to remove a tumour, and underwent three intense rounds of chemotherapy to kill the cancerous cells affecting his blood.
It was hoped a bone marrow transplant, carried out at Manchester Royal Infirmary in November 2022, would improve his condition - but tragically, the operation was not successful, and he was given the worst possible news. READ MORE: Mum broke down after being told reason for son's rashHis mum Kelly Ann Moore, 37, said: "The doctors called us over from the Ronald McDonald House.
They pulled us into a room with about nine nurses and told us there was nothing else they could do. There's no more treatment available.
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