
Cassie Corbett
Cassie Walks All Over Cancer

Total raised
£1,270.00
+ £238.00 Gift Aid
£25Kitting out our labs
£50Unravelling mysteries
£100Spotting cancer earlier
£150Making diagnosis kinder
£200Understanding errors in DNA
£300Finding cancer's weakness
£500Providing cancer support
£1,000Hunting innovations
Thu 1 Jul 2021 - Sat 31 Jul 2021
My Story
Thanks for visiting my fundraising page. I’ve decided to step up to the challenge of walking 10,000 steps every day throughout the month to help beat cancer sooner. Help me Walk All Over Cancer and fund life-saving research by sponsoring me. As you may know my beautiful younger sister received her very rare diagnosis of medullary thyroid cancer in July last year.... In the middle of a global pandemic. Yet she has battled on , which has involved 7.5 hour surgery and painful and agonising radiotherapy and yet she dealt with everything so amazingly and continues to do so. It’s an ongoing whirlwind of tests and waiting for results and more tests and more waiting whilst trying to remain “normal” for her three teenage children and husband. It’s not a cancer I had ever heard of before as so rare. So I am raising money to help research and treatment for this rare disease. So please even if you can only spare £1 it all helps. Anyone who knows me will know that I am not the fittest person or one that likes to walk anywhere but I am looking forward to this test :) thank you In advance 🥰

CAUSE
All Cancer Types
Cancer is complex. There are over 200 types of cancer, most of which have different biology and behaviour. With your support, our dedicated researchers can continue to discover better ways to prevent, detect and treat this disease, and bring about a world where everybody lives longer, better lives, free from the fear of cancer.
Latest updates
With Cancer Research UK Giving Pages more of the money raised goes towards beating cancer. Aside from the credit and debit card fees, every penny donated goes to Cancer Research UK.
All donations made to this page will automatically be transferred to Cancer Research UK.