Man with rare blood cancer seeks donor

A potential match from a bone marrow donor can help save the life of a young Dubai resident battling a rare form of blood cancer in the US.

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by

Asma Ali Zain

Published: Thu 21 Feb 2013, 9:23 AM

Last updated: Thu 18 Jul 2024, 1:25 PM

Family and friends of 38-year-old Indian Nimesh Joshi are launching a drive this weekend in Dubai to collect as many bone marrow matches as possible.

Fast facts

Procedure for donation

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Once the donor is committed, his/her bone marrow cells are harvested by giving general or regional anaesthesia using a surgical process, with no pain during the process. The amount of bone marrow drawn is only a small percentage of the total bone marrow and is typically replaced within four weeks.

The donor remains at the hospital for 24-48 hours and can resume normal activities within a few days.

Walk-in testing

February 22

Al Ahmadiah Centre in Satwa (10am-2pm)

Oasis Centre (management office) (2pm-10pm)

February 23

Sindhi Ceremonial Hall, Bur Dubai (10am-2pm)

India Club (4pm-8pm)

Donors at this stage will be required to undergo a 30-second-long painless cheek swab.

The swabs containing DNA cells will then be shipped to the US where doctors will test for a match.

Nimesh has 30 days to find a match before he can undergo another round of chemotherapy.

“This is a crucial time for us,” said Vicky Bageria, Nimesh’s best friend who is organising the drive. “We are totally distraught.”

A resident of Dubai, Nimesh was undergoing treatment for an enlarged spleen in a Mumbai hospital in November 2012 when he was diagnosed with ‘Hepatosplenic T-Cell Lymphoma’, a rare form of blood cancer. Nimesh, a hale and hearty father of a seven-year-old, was devastated when he was told he had to undergo aggressive chemotherapy and a bone marrow transplant to kill the cancer.

“I want to continue to be a father to my son,” says Nimesh on a flyer specially printed for the drive.

He has already undergone two chemo sessions at the City of Hope medical centre in Los Angeles.

“The treatments are very expensive and we hope that the transplant can save his life,” said Vicky.

His only sibling, parents and relatives are not a match.

Gender and blood groups are not relevant while donating bone marrow. Since marrow is inherited genetically, Nimesh’s best chance of finding a match is from the same ethnic group, i.e. a person of a South Asian descent.

The Emirates Bone Marrow Donor Registry located at Sharjah Blood Transfusion Centre does not have a match for Nimesh.

“We could have done the blood testing in Dubai but it is too expensive,” said Vicky.

“Latifa Hospital charges Dh2,500 per test and we are looking at thousands of tests here,” he added.

Once a match is found, healthy cells can either be harvested from the hip bone of the donor or simply through a blood donation.

Volunteers will have to pay Dh180 for the testing kit but in case payments can’t be made, the family will bear the cost or seek sponsorship. The cheek swabs will be carried out by a representative from an Indian NGO, Datri, that helps organise such drives and is creating a database of potential donors.

asmaalizain@khaleejtimes.com

Asma Ali Zain

Published: Thu 21 Feb 2013, 9:23 AM

Last updated: Thu 18 Jul 2024, 1:25 PM

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