Woman’s Day (New Zealand)

SAVED BY A LONG-LOST RELATIVE!

After tracing her ancestry back to the UK, Regina found an unlikely cure for her cancer

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Regina Batten was bursting with excitement as her wedding day approached. Having just celebrated her 30th with daughters Amber, now 16, twins Olivia and Matilda, eight, and fiancé Sam, tying the knot was the icing on the cake.

But something niggled at Regina, who’s from Dubbo, New South Wales.

“I’d always been fit and healthy, but I started noticing lots of bruises on my legs and I felt exhausted all the time,” tells the 35-year-old, who works in finance.

After visiting her GP and being prescribed a short course of antibiotic­s, Regina felt no better. Following a blood test, her doctor explained she had leukaemia.

Regina was eventually airlifted to Sydney’s Royal Prince Alfred Hospital for specialist treatment. On what should have been her wedding day, the brave mum started gruelling bouts of chemo for her rare type of blood cancer, acute myeloid leukaemia.

Regina and Sam had a small wedding ceremony at home between rounds of chemo, and while she was soon told her body was free of cancer, a year after her September 2017 diagnosis, her health once again took a turn for the worse. This time, she was told an allogenic stem-cell transplant would ultimately save her life.

Efforts to find a match among family and on the Australian Bone Marrow Donor Registry proved futile, but then a possible fit came from a surprising source.

“It wasn’t until we traced our ancestry back and found we had family from England on my dad’s side that there was hope,” explains Regina.

It was discovered that stem cells in the umbilical cords of two of Regina’s long-lost relatives when they were babies had been stored for decades. The frozen cells were flown from the UK to Australia and doctors found they were both viable matches for a transplant.

Incredibly, Regina still has no idea who the relatives are or if they’re still alive. But in December 2018, she had a double cord blood transplant, which her body accepted.

About to celebrate five years in remission, Regina hopes to one day track down her cord blood donors so she can thank them for saving her life.

Sadly, she and Sam have now split, but Regina is thankful for all she’s learned along the way. “You don’t know how strong you are until you have to be,” she says.

 ?? ?? Regina with her three girls.
Regina with her three girls.
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