
Ontario farmer connects with stem cell donor in Germany who 'saved' his life after cancer diagnosis
CBC
A few years ago, Walt Brown's future was uncertain.
The 71-year-old Leamington, Ont., farmer had just been diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia — a cancer of the blood and bone marrow — following an annual doctor's checkup.
"I had no indication that there was anything wrong with me, I was going about my farming business like any other time, feeling great and so it was just shocking. It was hard to process," said Brown, who is now 74 years old.
After two months of chemotherapy, he was told he was a stem cell transplant candidate and all he needed was a match.
Before he knew it, Brown had a match and got the life-saving transplant at a Hamilton hospital in 2018.
He was told he couldn't know who his donor was until at least two years after the transplant. Last year, Brown requested to know more about the person who gave him their stem cells.
"I was quite taken back, he was a young lad from Germany and when he donated his cells he was 26 years old," he said. "It's just so remarkable that ... you have somebody that's in Europe donating cells over here and saving your life."
This past December, Brown emailed his donor and just recently, he received a response.
"His comment was that my email had made his Christmas, so I take from there that he was elated for what he could do for me and I'm elated what he did for me, saved my life, my story is a miracle," he said.
Windsor Regional Hospital oncologist and clinical lead of the hospital's stem cell transplant program, Dr. Caroline Hamm, knows Brown's case well.
"It's just magic you know, somebody just saves a life," she said through tears.
"It's just so generous just to say, 'OK, I'm going to take time out of my life and I'm just going to donate. I don't know if I'm going to help someone,' but then when you meet the people that actually saved your life, everyone gets emotional about it ... it's just a really magical thing to do."
She said the advancement in medicine that she has seen within her career has been nothing short of amazing.
While she was training to become a doctor, Hamm recalls a friend of hers whose father died at 56 years old, because stem cell transplants weren't being done on people at that age.