Saadat Mumtaz, 48, is fundraising for Brain Tumour Research in memory of his mother and Parkinson’s UK, as his father was diagnosed with the disease 22 years ago. Image: Brain Tumour Research.

A Bristol man is taking on the challenge of trekking to K2 Base Camp in Pakistan, to fundraise for the charity Brain Tumour Research, after his mother died from the deadly disease.

On 8 July, Saadat Mumtaz, 48, of Portishead, will be joined by his two sons, 18-year-old Sinan, who is due to begin a BSc in Pharmacology at the University of Bristol and 20-year-old Hashim, a third-year Chemistry student at Cardiff University.

The trio will attempt to reach K2 Base Camp, the world’s second-highest mountain, which lies in the Karakoram range.

Business owner Saadat, who is also a foster parent to two teenagers said “I’ve trekked many of North Pakistan’s mountains before, to a height of 3000m, however, I know that getting to Base Camp will be as much of a mental challenge as it is a physical one.”

The challenge of a lifetime will see the family members trekking treacherous paths taking them across Baltoro Glacier, passing four 8,000m mountains along the way, eventually reaching K2’s Concordia Base Camp, which sits at an eyewatering 5,100 metres.

His epic fundraising quest is in aid of two charities: Brain Tumour Research in memory of his late mother and Parkinson’s UK in honour of his 84-year-old father, who was diagnosed with the disease 22 years ago.

Mother-of-five, Saeeda Bano, from Sargodha in Pakistan, was 29 when she was diagnosed with an inoperable glioblastoma multiform, in December 1983, after spells of passing out from debilitating headaches.

Saadat said: “My sister, Alia thinks I am crazy for taking on this challenge but it’s something I have felt passionate about ever since my mother’s diagnosis.

“After our mother’s diagnosis, she spent every moment caring for me and my four siblings, something I understand now. She realised she wasn’t going to survive the disease and I find it hard to comprehend that even now, treatment options for people diagnosed with a brain tumour are limited.”

The extreme-hiker and his two sons will be heading to the Sarfaranga Cold Desert North of Skardu, which is ranked as the world’s highest and coldest desert, at the end of June to acclimatise to the high altitudes they will face, as they take on one of the highest peaks in the world, only second to Mount Everest in Nepal.

“I remember my parents were at a hospital appointment more than 240km away from where we were being looked after by my aunty. I was determined to visit my mother and support both parents and made the journey on my own as a 14-year-old child, travelling from Sargodha to Lahore navigating public transport with little money, as a young boy, my parents were shocked when I arrived” Saadat recalls.

Mel Tiley, community development manager for Brain Tumour Research, said:

“We’re thankful for Saadat and his sons’ fundraising for Brain Tumour Research and wish them well on their epic challenge.

“Unfortunately, the family’s story is not an isolated one and demonstrates the need for further funding for research on the many types of brain tumours that exist. Treatment options haven’t progressed enough since Saeeda’s diagnosis and we’re still in desperate need of more funding to help find a cure for the disease”.

Brain Tumour Research funds sustainable research at dedicated centres in the UK. It also campaigns for the Government and the larger cancer charities to invest more in research into brain tumours in order to speed up new treatments for patients and, ultimately, find a cure.

The charity is the driving force behind the call for a national annual spend of £35 million in order to improve survival rates and patient outcomes in line with other cancers such as breast cancer and leukaemia and is also campaigning for greater repurposing of drugs.