Family of 18-month-old leukaemia patient swabbing community and offering £20K for match

1 year ago
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The family of an 18-month-old leukaemia patient are swabbing the community - and offering £20K for a successful stem cell or bone marrow match.

Little Elaiya Hameed has a rare cancer which can only be cured by a donor - most likely from someone sharing her Pakistani heritage.

The rare cancer can be cured by peripheral blood stem cell collection (PBSC), transfusion or bone marrow donation.

Elaiya was diagnosed in June with acute myeloid leukaemia which can only be cured by stem cell collection or bone marrow donation.

Grandfather Mazhar Iqbal says the family are offering 20K to a suitable donor and she is "running out of time."

He said: "We are offering to turn the world upside down to help my granddaughter. This is a matter of life and death.

"We are also hoping this financial incentive will encourage people to sign up to complete the very easy blood transfusion.

"It's simpler than a covid test and takes barely time at all, we just need people to click on the link and sign up.

"The money will change their life if they can change my granddaughter's.

"The biggest problem for Elaiya is purely not enough Asian, ethnic minorities or south Asian country's people being on the donor list.

"They just don't go on it."

On the Instagram campaign page her parents, Summan and Muzahir Hameed, wrote: "We've just been informed by doctors that Elaiya falls into the "high risk" group, this means the standard course of treatment (chemotherapy) isn't sufficient to help her fight this successfully.

"We've begun the search for a bone marrow donor and we desperately need your help.

"Our daughter has the spirit of a fighter; Elaiya melts the hearts of all those who meet her."

Mr Iqbal said the whole family have been "devastated" since finding out about Elaiya's diagnosis seven weeks ago.

The family have now joined forces with Anthony Nolan charity, who help make connections between patients and strangers ready to donate their stem cells - and hold a bank for under 30-year-olds for stem cell donors.

The family managed to arrange a surgery in Bristol where over 200 people showed up for swab tests to help Elaiya.

In total, they were able to process 198 positive registrations in the four-hour swab test clinic - which is the second highest the charity has ever recorded.

Two were found to be positive matches for other cancer patients looking for donors, but sadly a match has still not been found for Elaiya.

The family are offering a donor £20,000 and are visiting cities around the country to complete further surgeries, in hopes they will find her match before it's too late.

They are hosting a surgery in Birmingham today and one in Nottingham on 24 July.

Mr Iqbal added that the statistics for cancer-patients of Asian and BAME descent are less likely to be successful in finding a donor, purely due to the amount of people on the register.

He explained: "For Asian and BAME communities, the ratio of finding a match for a stem cell donor in the UK is less than 30%.

"Whereas an English person has a chance of 90% and above of finding match".

"We just haven't got enough people from our communities registered, but finding out now that so many individuals are starting to register since we began the campaign is amazing.

"My granddaughter is obviously touching heats and waking people up."

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