📰 Full Story
Gyles Brandreth, the 77-year-old broadcaster and former MP, has spoken publicly about his grandson Kitt’s childhood cancer diagnosis, calling it “a shock to the system.” Kitt was 15 months old when a pea-sized lump discovered in April 2017 led to tests diagnosing rhabdomyosarcoma, a rare soft-tissue sarcoma.
Treated at Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH), he underwent chemotherapy, multiple blood and platelet transfusions, and battled a bacterial infection that affected his heart and liver; he also developed veno-occlusive disease, a serious chemotherapy complication.
Kitt rang the end-of-treatment bell in November 2017, has been in remission for eight years and has yearly checks; he is now 10 and lives abroad with his parents and brother.
Brandreth praised GOSH’s multidisciplinary teams and described his role as providing normality for the family.
He is supporting GOSH Charity’s appeal to fund a new Children’s Cancer Centre ahead of World Cancer Day (Feb. 4), while urging progress toward kinder, modern treatments for paediatric cancers and noting that many childhood therapies remain decades old despite advances such as CAR T‑cell therapy.






















💬 Commentary