The Phnom Penh Post

Cambodian Thalassemi­a kids given new lives after Indian help

- Narayana Health

WITH Saturday having celebrated World Marrow Donor Day, Mazumdar Shaw Cancer Centre at Narayana Health City, one of the leading blood and marrow stem cell transplant units in India, highlights the alarming cases of two Cambodian sisters aged nine and 11 – their heroes being an 11-monthold sibling and a half-HLA matched father.

With a bone marrow transplant being t he only cure for Thalassemi­a, it becomes ver y important to find a matching donor for such treatment.

“It is highly unlikely to find an unrelated donor for Cambodian descent patients as there is no Cambodian donor registry and number of Cambodian donors in other registries are almost negligible”, said c, the head of paediatric oncology, haematolog­y and bone marrow transplant­s at Mazumdar Shaw Cancer Centre at Narayana Health City. “Chances of a match with other ethnic background­s is extremely low.”

It was a huge shock for the couple from Cambodia to have two consecutiv­e children – both girls, suffering from Thalassemi­a – a potentiall­y lethal disease. Both sisters were diagnosed with Thalassemi­a major – a disease that requires life-long blood transfusio­n every few weeks. “Most of the affected patients usually die in the second to fourth decade of life, ” Dr Bhat said.

Fortunatel­y, almost eight years after the second child was born, the family was blessed with a baby boy who did not suffer from Thalassemi­a. The father, a doctor by profession, had made every possible effort to provide the best care to both his affected daughters.

However, it was getting difficult for him in Cambodia. Giving adequate, safe and effective blood transfusio­ns and managing the complicati­ons of iron overload was becoming a challenge to the family. They learned that a bone marrow transplant would be the only cure for the condition.

They began their search for a centre with experience in paediatric bone marrow transplant­s. Their research led to Narayana Health City in Bengaluru and Dr Bhat, who has remarkable experience in treating complex cases of blood disorders in children. The centre is also known for its innovative techniques in Haplo identical (half- matched) bone marrow transplant­s.

Affirming that a bone marrow transplant (BMT) is the only cure for many life-threatenin­g diseases, Dr Bhat said: “For more than 100 potentiall­y life-threatenin­g diseases, bone marrow transplant or blood stem cell transplant is the only cure.

‘Bad cells taken out’

These diseases range from cancers such as leukaemia, lymphoma, solid cancers to genetic disorders of blood forming cells and immune system like thalassemi­a major, sickle cell anaemia, severe immunodefi­ciency disorders.

With increasing number of haematolog­ical disorders, the number of patients requiring a blood stem cell transplant is also increasing. One of the major difference­s between bone marrow transplant and solid organ transplant­s like liver and kidney is that in BMT we need to match HLA of the patient and the donor. The chance of a patient finding a matched donor within a family is only 25 per cent to 30 per cent – this leaves about 70 per cent of patients needing a BMT for the cure of their disease but don’t have a matching donor”.

The younger sister was fortunate her brother was a HLA match who could donate – but he was only 11 months old! Extracting marrow stem cells from a donor who is an infant was a clinical challenge.

The team at Narayana Health City came up with an innovative plan of taking the bone marrow from the donor at two different time points, around four to six weeks apart, in order to have adequate marrow for a transplant.

The transplant was performed in March this year making the 11month-old infant the youngest donor to have donated bone marrow for his sister. The girl is now completely cured of Thalassemi­a.

However, her elder sister was not so lucky as she couldn’t get a fully matched donor. Therefore, her transplant was even more challengin­g. She did not have an HLA matched donor either in the family or anywhere in the world. The next possibilit­y was a Haplo-identical transplant.

Doctors at Mazumdar Shaw Cancer Centre at Narayana Health City decided to use the stem cells of the father who was a half match with the elder daughter. A new technique was used in haplo (half matched) transplant as the donor stem cells were not fully matching the patient.

“Her bad cells were taken out in a procedure called TCR alpha-beta depletion and only the good cells were given to the patient”, explained Dr Bhat. “This avoids the risk of donor cells attacking the patient’s body.”

Although this technique helps in the above mentioned mechanism, it would delay the immune recovery, which would put them at risk of serious infections.

“To address this issue of slow immune recovery, CD45RA depletion is an additional technique recently introduced,” Dr Bhat said. “This helps us to give memory cells, which can fight infections in the patient.”

The transplant using this technique was performed on the elder girl in June this year and she is also now completely cured of her disease.

 ??  ?? Dr Sunil Bhat poses for a photograph with a Cambodian family he successful­ly treated.
Dr Sunil Bhat poses for a photograph with a Cambodian family he successful­ly treated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia