Rotorua woman with brain tumour going to United States for $550,000 treatment
An MRI scan revealed she had a brain tumour, believed to be Grade 1, benign and โslow-growingโ.

โIt was pretty shocking. Iโd never had anything wrong before.โ
At the time, Branson had just finished her training to be a Les Mills instructor and was working at a gym.
Originally from Canada, she and her family moved to New Zealand in 1999.
She lives with her partner, McKenzie Lunt, and his family in Rotorua but is looking to spend more time in Canada where her mother now lives. Her father lives in Pฤpฤmoa.

Branson said the tumour was โa little smallerโ than the size of a golf ball.
The tumour was growing next to her sagittal sinus vein โ a โdelicateโ area โ which had made it โexponentially harder for everythingโ.
One week after her diagnosis, Branson had surgery at Waikato Hospital to remove as much of the tumour as possible.
Testing revealed the tumour was Grade 3 โ and cancerous.
She had a second surgery to remove more, followed by six weeks of radiation.

Back to โnormalโ life
Branson returned to โnormalโ life after finishing radiation by Christmas 2021. She started working at Rotorua Lakes Council, enjoyed spending time with friends and going for walks and to the gym.
But a routine scan in early 2023 found the tumour had started growing again.
โItโs obviously very unfortunate …โ
She said her โworld-classโ doctors told her more radiation would be too risky.
โThey wanted to help but there wasnโt really anything they could confidently do.โ
Her family researched other treatment options and found the Gamma Knife procedure in San Francisco.
Branson said her doctors said it was a โsaferโ type of radiation as it was โa lower dose coming in from a lot of angles and meeting at one pointโ.

She had the treatment in February 2023, which cost $150,000.
โIt did its job … we were hoping to get a little bit longer out of it I think, but itโs just the nature of the tumour and how it just likes to latch on to whateverโs there and just keep growing.โ
Bransonโs tumour had since returned.
She is returning to San Francisco on February 21 for surgery and radiation treatment called brachytherapy.
The operation โ scheduled for February 24 โ involved โrice-sized seedsโ of radiation, which would be implanted during surgery.
โIt can be really targeted … where they canโt safely remove it surgically, theyโll be able to put those seeds and hopefully tackle whatโs left.โ
The cost of the treatment is $450,000 Canadian dollars – about $550,000.
โA hard decisionโ
Branson and her family set up a GoFundMe page with funds raised going towards the โcriticalโ surgery.
At the time of writing, she had raised C$115,000.
โWeโre just so blown away by everyone coming together … โ
People had organised fundraisers for her, which had been โso humblingโ.
โI just canโt even put it into words.โ
Her family, partner and workplace had been great supporters, she said.
Branson said the remaining cost would be self-funded.
She applied to withdraw money from her KiwiSaver. Her mother took out a higher mortgage after she sold her house in New Zealand and moved back to Canada, she said.
โEveryone keeps saying, โAnyone would do it for their kidsโ,โ Branson said.
โBut obviously, and not that anyone has ever said it or thinking it, but no one wants to be that sort of burden on their family financially.
โItโs a lot of money. And I was back and forth on it for a long time about not wanting to do it or just wanting to try something else instead,โ she said through tears.
โBut this being the best option, itโs pretty hard to convince everyone else to back down.
โIโm glad that weโre doing it because youโd rather … regret doing it than regret not doing it … Itโs a hard decision to have to make.โ

After surgery, Branson would spend time with family in Canada. She planned to return to New Zealand in October or November.
Asked what her prognosis was, Branson said her oncologist asked if she wanted to know this when she was first diagnosed.
โAt the time, I said โI donโt think it will help the situation’.โ
The treatment goal was to โpush that date out, whatever that might be, if itโs five years, 10 yearsโ.
โI think the reality of it is that itโs not great but everything that weโre doing is helping with that.โ
Megan Wilson is a health and general news reporter for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post. She has been a journalist since 2021.