Sarah Beeny took to Instagram on Wednesday to show her support for Brain Tumour Research amid her ongoing battle with breast cancer.
The property expert, 51, filmed herself and her son lighting a candle to honour the charity’s Shine A Light campaign, which aims to raise awareness of the devastating disease.
In the short video, the Channel 4 presenter said: “We’re lighting a candle for Brain Tumour Research” before instructing her son to light the candle with a blow torch.
Jokingly, she quipped after, “perhaps we should use a match next time.”
Captioning her video, she penned: “#shinealight for @braintumourrsch thanks for the amazing work you do!! Xx ps @nickyjohnston stunning candle you made, thanks so much Xx”.
Beeny revealed she was diagnosed with breast cancer last August and underwent a mastectomy as part of her treatment.
Before her final chemotherapy treatment last year, Beeny revealed that her final session was cancelled after her white blood cell count was too low and her liver levels were too high.
In February, the TV star’s sons confirmed that she was back in hospital getting further treatment for her breast cancer.
They explained that she underwent another procedure at the Royal Marsden and Yeovil hospitals on Thursday (February 3) via their Instagram page, The Entitled Sons, alongside a photo of her lying in a hospital bed.
They quipped that she had got “tattoos” on her chest ahead of her latest stint under the knife, which were in fact black markings for her surgery.
Captioning the post, her sons wrote: “Mum finally got some tattoos!
“Thank you so much to @rovalmarsdennhs and @yeovil_hospital_nhs for taking such amazingly brilliant care of her. #tatoo #mum.”
The property expert shared news of her cancer diagnosis in August, and previously said that she almost expected to develop the disease after losing her mum to cancer aged 39, when Sarah was just 10.
Beeny — who is best known for her work on UK property programmes including Help! My House Is Falling Down and Sarah Beeny’s New Life In The Country — told The Telegraph that she had begun a course of chemotherapy to treat the cancer and had surgery.