Kin of Indian girl with rare cancer in UAE needs help

Update: 2013-05-28 00:50 GMT
An 11-year-old Indian girl in UAE has a rare cancer and her family is racing against time to collect funds for her treatment. Martina Thomas, who will turn 12 on 4 June, started taking chemotharapy in Abu Dhabi a year ago after she was diagnosed with lymphoblastic leukemia, a form of childhood cancer symptomised by an abnormally high white blood-cell count.

Though she started taking the chemotherapy course immediately after she was diagnosed with the disease last year, it was not enough, and now she needs a bone marrow transplant. A screening for a match of her mother Dolly, father Shaji, brother Ken and sister Karen yielded negative results.

The family then contacted international Bone Marrow Database Worldwide and found a perfect match in Germany in March. Though the donor is ready, the sheer cost of the treatment, 600,000 dirhams, at the Christian Medical College at Vellore in Tamil Nadu has stopped the family from starting the process of transplant. ‘I was very happy when a donor was found, but now I am praying only for the transplant to take place. We just desperately need the money. It would mean the world,’ Dolly said.

The family said anybody wanting to help them can send a cheque in the name of the treasurer, Christian Medical College, Vellore, indicating the patient’s name with hospital number (254015F), or contact Dolly Mathew on 00971-55-390 1315.

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