1st-grader puts personal spin on bell ringing to signal end to years of chemotherapy

Jimmy Spagnolo, 6, was later surprised by staff and students at his school.

— -- Jimmy Spagnolo is a 6-year-old dancing machine.

"Music is in his soul," Lacie Spagnolo told ABC News today.

So it made sense that after Jimmy, a first-grader from outside Pittsburgh, rang a bell last week signaling the end of his final chemotherapy treatment, he screamed, hugged his family and then, of course, began dancing.

The Sound of 'Success': Young Patients Ring Bell to Mark End of Cancer Treatment

The ringing of a bell is a tradition that's been adopted by children's cancer centers around the country to mark the end of the chemotherapy journey and hopefully a child's discharge from the hospital.

Lacie Spagnolo told ABC News today that it was Jimmy's first time getting to ring a bell.

"It was like awesome. I'm so glad to be done," he told ABC affiliate WTAE-TV in Pittsburgh. "I'm so glad to be done treatment."

In 2010, when he was just 4 months told, Jimmy was diagnosed with a glioma, or tumor of the brain or spine. Lacie Spagnolo said he underwent four one-year rounds of chemotherapy.

On Feb. 2, Jimmy, donning a Superman shirt, was joined by Lacie Spagnolo; his father, Jim Spagnolo; his sister Lily; and medical staffers at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh as he celebrated the end of his latest cancer treatment.

"I'm done!" he exclaimed as the port for his chemotherapy was removed from his chest.

The next day, on Feb. 3, Jimmy returned to Rogers Primary School and was welcomed by students, teachers and administrators with what else but a party. And yes, there was some dancing.

"We felt Jimmy's elation," Lacie Spagnolo said today. "We felt completely loved by all the staff of CHP that shared our joy with us and that love our little boy ... To feel the support on a community level, the people you see every day cheering your son on and celebrating his victory as if it were their own — that's a community worth being a part of, a community of good people with big hearts."

Lacie Spagnolo said Jimmy would get his next MRI scan in March to see how well the chemotherapy worked and then scans every three months for the next year.

"As long as the scans are stable, Jimmy gets to stay off all medications," she said. "We live our life three months at a time ... No matter what, we handle it as gracefully as possible because we have the gift of Jimmy every day and that is a blessing in itself."