LULU Demetriou has gone through hell since she was diagnosed with a deadly cancer at just eight months — and now she is calling on Australia’s bosses to get a little taste of her pain in order to raise money to help other kids.

Lulu was diagnosed with stage four neuroblastoma when doctors found a grapefruit-sized tumour inside her tiny abdomen.

The cancer spread to her Lulu’s bones and bone marrow.

Neuroblastoma is the leading cause of cancer deaths in children under five and Lulu has undergone 12 rounds of aggressive chemotherapy, a stem cell transplant, major surgery, radiotherapy and immunotherapy.

“The pain these kids go through on a daily basis would make a grown person cry. The courage she has shown during treatment, she really is a wonder woman,” her mum Josie said.

But Lulu is still not clear of cancer and her future depends on research into new personalised therapies.

As the face of the Children’s Cancer Institute’s CEO Dare To Cure challenge, she is daring leaders to endure a little discomfort to raise money for research.

Challenges include walking on glass or fire, getting a tattoo or getting your head shaved.

CEO of theright.fit and Wink Models, Taryn Williams, has accepted a challenge to get in a snake pit.

“I’m going to do the snake challenge and get in a box with pythons and let them crawl all over me,” the entrepreneur said.

“It’s just one day we have to experience some discomfort when these kids have to endure it for months or years.”

Lulu’s mum has also accepted the challenge to get a tattoo on live TV on Dare To Cure challenge day on September 7.

“I’ve put up my hand for the tattoo and it will be a little bit of pain but there is no better cause — so what if I am a little bit out of my comfort zone,” she said.

Professor Michelle Haber, executive director of the Children’s Cancer Institute, said research into individualised treatment held the key to helping children like Lulu beat cancer.

“We are challenging CEOs and business leaders from around Australia to step outside their comfort zones, take on a dare and help us cure childhood cancer,” she said.