Second Chance at
Life for Adult Stem Cell Transplant Patient
Part Two of Two
By David Prentice
Editor's note.
This first appeared today on Dr. Prentice's blog at
http://www.frcblog.com/2011/02/second-chance-at-life-for-adult-stem-cell-transplant-patient/
An update on the
City of Hope's 10,000th bone marrow adult stem cell
transplant. The patient, now identified as 51-year-old
William Fuller, was released from the hospital last week
[http://eon.businesswire.com/news/eon/20110208007668/en/Patient-Receives-City-Hope%E2%80%99s-10000th-Bone-Marrow].
The father of
three, a small-business owner, was born in Belize and
came to the U.S. in 1982. When he had his adult stem
cell transplant on Jan. 13, 2011, his nurse wished him
"Happy Birthday," signaling the beginning of his new
life.
According to Dr.
Stephen J. Forman at City of Hope:
"Mr. Fuller is the
poster child for what we do. There are thousands of
other people like him who have been helped because a
donor came forward to provide lifesaving stem cells that
allowed us to do a transplant and hopefully cure the
disease. Every patient who gets through a transplant
here is the beneficiary of a lot of laboratory work and
hard thinking that's gone into trying to solve the
problem – how to best cure the cancer in the safest way
possible."
Dr. Forman noted
many patients view their adult stem cell donors as new
members of their family, and often develop lifelong
relationships. "They are 'blood relatives,'" he said.
Mr. Fuller
credited his sister, Karen Hyde, as being instrumental
in arranging bone marrow drives in California, Florida
and New York with the help of "Be the Match," the
national marrow donor program.
Adult stem cells
continue to save thousands of lives every year.
Part Three
Part One |