Boy is Cured of Aggressive Cancer Thanks to Stem Cell Treatment Using Donated Umbilical Cord
This 9-year-old boy is now cancer-free after undergoing a cutting-edge stem cell transplant that used a donated umbilical cord.
Jenson Wright was first diagnosed with lymphoma in November 2013 when he was just 4 years old.
The brave youngster managed to beat the deadly disease following several rounds of chemotherapy, but the cancer returned for a second time and medics discovered he was now battling acute myeloid leukemia – and the cancer was more aggressive than ever, spreading to 70% of Jenson’s body.
Jenson, who is from Penketh, England, underwent two more rounds of chemotherapy, but unfortunately, it didn’t work as they had hoped.
The only remaining option for the youngster was a life-saving stem cell transplant using an umbilical cord from Texas which had been stored in a freezer for an unknown amount of time.
After he underwent the operation in December 2016, doctors were shocked to find that he had incredibly responded to the treatment in just five days.
More than two years after the transplant, Jenson has now been told he is completely cured of cancer.
His 46-year-old mum Carolyn said: “It came completely out the blue, it was a complete shock. It was quite emotional when they said it because you never expect to hear those words when you’ve been going through so much.
“Jenson took it in his stride – he was quite blasé about it really. I don’t think the severity of the illness he had has ever really hit him,” she added. “We’re quite fortunate because he was so young at the time he was diagnosed, so he didn’t really understand it like an adult would.
“It’s always in the back of your mind, wondering what the tests they’re doing are going to find. That’s why it was such a shock when they said he was cured, and that they didn’t want to see him again – it’s a bit surreal really. He can just be like any other child again now.”
Jenson’s cancer battle started when his mum noticed a swelling on the side of his face in the rear-view mirror while driving.
Upon taking a closer look, she realized the swelling was actually a hard lump and she immediately took him to the hospital. After various tests and X-rays, they were told to bring Jenson back for an urgent biopsy.
When the results came back, he was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, the most common form of childhood cancer, minutes after he had started school.
Jenson started treatment straight away and underwent nine months of intensive chemotherapy. He lost his hair, his face and body were swollen, he was constantly hungry, and he experienced angry mood swings.
Now that the stem cell treatment has cured his cancer, however, Jenson has been going “from strength to strength”.
“The early stages of the treatment were quite hard to comprehend, and quite difficult for us emotionally,” said Carolyn. “Without the transplant we would be in a completely different situation – that saved him.”
A 2013 study that was published in the scientific journal Blood says: “Umbilical cord blood is an alternative … stem cell source for patients with hematologic diseases who can be cured by allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation.
“Initially, umbilical cord blood transplantation was limited to children, given the low cell dose infused. Both related and unrelated cord blood transplants have been performed with high rates of success for a variety of hematologic disorders and … diseases in the pediatric setting.”
Another article from Lancaster University says that pregnant women should talk to a medical professional about donating their umbilical cords so that it can save other kids like Jenson.
“We will never get to find out who the donor was, but by donating it, they’ve given life to somebody else,” said Carolyn. “In the last two years, we’ve managed to get our lives back to some normality.”
Jenson, his dad, mom, and 18-year-old older brother recently had a family meal to celebrate the news that the youngster is now free from cancer.
“He’s actually got different DNA now because of the stem cell transplant – he’s basically been reborn again,” she pondered. “Now it’s just a case of getting our heads around the fact that this part of our lives is over, and hopefully we won’t have to revisit it again. We can just enjoy our future.”