Four-year-old Cambridge girl battling leukemia finds bone marrow match

Four-year-old Cambridge girl battling leukemia finds bone marrow matchA bone marrow match has been found for Katie Herron, about 123 days in the wake of being diagnosed with tumor for the second time.

The four-year-old Cambridge young lady, who was being dealt with at Sickkids Hospital, was initially diagnosed with intense lymphoblastic leukemia when she was 15-months-old. Following 25 months of concentrated medicine, including chemotherapy and steroids, it showed up she had won the fight. Shockingly, in the same way that things started to turn around the growth returned in November.

In an exertion to discover a bone marrow transplant, many individuals lined up a month ago at an undifferentiated cell facility in Kitchener to check whether their bone marrow might be a match for Herron or any other person in necessity.

On Sunday evening her father Paul affirmed on her raising support page that a close impeccable match had been found with a 36-old-year man.

He said the family had been advised last Wednesday, yet they required time to process the methodology before offering the news.

He said, "We are so extremely appreciative for this astounding blessing, and are excited to have the capacity to let you know that it is the best case situation surrounding. Despite the fact that this stage will be the most testing, troublesome and life-debilitating a piece of Katie's voyage, we will until further notice simply praise the actuality Katie has a match."