Advertisement

Community Seeking Bone-Marrow Donors

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

At an age when most kids are concerned about pimples, the prom and college entrance exams, Valerie Sun worries about scrapes and cuts.

Since being diagnosed five years ago with aplastic anemia, a rare disease that has left her unable to produce enough cells and platelets for her blood to carry oxygen and clot, the 15-year-old senior at Thousand Oaks High School has had a set of priorities very different from her peers.

“I look around at my friends and they’re worrying about school and stuff,” said Valerie, who skipped her junior year. “But I have to worry about my health, too, so it can get pretty hard.”

Advertisement

Valerie sometimes suffers painful headaches because of a lack of oxygen reaching her brain; she is often fatigued and would bleed uncontrollably if she were ever cut. But she hasn’t lost hope on a million-to-one procedure that might save her life.

Like 118 other Ventura County residents, the majority of whom are children, Valerie needs a bone-marrow transplant.

There are more than 60 diseases, such as leukemia and Hodgkin’s disease, that can be effectively treated with such transplants.

Advertisement

Marrow is the soft spongy tissue inside the bone that constantly replenishes the body’s supply of blood cells.

If successful, transplants can either help boost the patient’s ability to fight a disease or can cure it altogether.

More than 2.8 million people are listed on the nation’s registry of possible donors, but the chances of finding a genetic match outside one’s immediate family are still very rare.

Advertisement

Next most likely to provide a marrow match are those of similar ethnic backgrounds.

That makes Valerie’s search tougher, because there are a limited number of Chinese Americans in the national bone-marrow registry.

Yet, with the help of family and friends at her church, United Methodist in Thousand Oaks, Valerie is hoping for a miracle.

Last month, church volunteers organized a fund-raising event to help pay the testing cost of $45 per donor. They had hoped to raise $4,000 but ended up with three times that.

Today, volunteers will be putting that money to use by holding a bone-marrow registration drive from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the church, 1000 E. Janss St.

Anyone between the ages of 18 and 60 may volunteer for the free blood tests administered by medical professionals.

“I know that most likely nothing will turn up, but it’s important, because even if it doesn’t help me, it might help somebody else,” Valerie said.

Advertisement

Maybe somebody like Joe Haskin, a 44-year-old father of four in Westlake Village.

Haskin, whose bone marrow has been ravaged by lymphoma, knows his last hope is to find someone with a genetic match.

A transplant could conceivably extend his life long enough to let him watch his youngest son, 5-year-old Colin, grow up. Without the transplant, his prognosis is far less certain.

“It’s daunting,” he said about the odds of finding a donor. “But I’m not giving up. I’m hopeful that someone will turn up.”

To help bolster his chances, Haskin’s friends and family will hold a fund-raiser Dec. 7 at St. Jude’s Catholic Church, 32032 W. Lindero Canyon Road, in Westlake Village to help raise money to pay for the cost of testing people.

Advertisement