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'Be A Hero' Screening Raises Awareness Of Need For Stem Cell Donors

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  • 'Be A Hero' Screening Raises Awareness Of Need For Stem Cell Donors

    'BE A HERO' SCREENING RAISES AWARENESS OF NEED FOR STEM CELL DONORS

    Armenian Weekly
    September 27, 2012

    More Armenians now are aware of the need for stem cell donors,
    thanks to a successful screening event held in Newton, Mass. on
    Sept. 2 during the Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) Olympics. About
    two dozen individuals of Armenian descent were screened and had their
    data registered in response.

    Armenians are most likely to find a match with another Armenian.

    That's why it's important for all Armenians who fit the donor profile
    to be screened and to register their data.

    The event focused on Debbi Margosian Chapman, who is battling Acute
    Myeloid Leukemia, and is in desperate need of a donor for a stem cell
    transplant to restore her bone marrow. However, she is not the only
    Armenian in need.

    "More than 200 Armenians are in need of a donor, and any one of the
    persons screened could be a life-saving match," said Lawrence V.

    Najarian, MD, the president of AAHPO (www.aahpo.org), a New York area
    Armenian group that supported the event.

    Haig Hrakelian, who was screened at the Sept. 2 event, said he was
    proud to undergo the simple cheek-swab test: "It's important for
    Armenians to help each other."

    "I'm delighted so many Armenians took the time to come over to our
    table and get their names in the registry database. There's a lot
    of anxiety about what being a donor entails. We are always happy to
    educate people so they can see how easy it is to join and if someone
    is lucky enough to match, how easy and painless it is to be a donor,"
    said event organizer Linda Levin-Scherz.

    Dr. Armen H. Arslanian, the president of AAMA, an Armenian group based
    in Boston, shared a personal story: "My cousin recovered from Acute
    Myelogenous Leukemia at Tufts only after he received bone marrow,
    and everyone deserves a chance like that! Imagine the extreme joy of
    life again."

    Potential donors should be in good health and between ages 18 and 50.

    Donating stem cells is similar to giving blood; a donor's stem
    cells are removed and the blood is returned to the donor. Within
    a couple of weeks, donor stem cells are replenished. There is no
    surgery, no anesthesia, and no cost to the donor. To learn more,
    visit http://bit.ly/PqTPQG.

    Many in need cannot find a match from direct relatives. According to
    the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry (visitwww.abmdr.ma), only 25
    percent of patients afflicted with leukemia or other life-threatening
    blood disorders find donors within their families. The other 75 percent
    depend on finding a perfectly matched unrelated donor, usually from
    their own ethnic community.

    In other words, Armenians are most likely to find a match with another
    Armenian. That's why it's important for all Armenians who fit the
    donor profile to be screened and to register their data.

    "AAHPO is very excited to have collaborated with AAMA to raise regional
    awareness. Now we need to educate Armenians throughout the U.S. and
    abroad of this pressing medical need," noted Najarian.

    AAHPO has recently publicized two other cases, those of Irene
    Katrandjian and young Charlotte Conybear of Philadelphia, who also
    desperately need to find a match.

    To learn more, view a TV program from AAHPO in which
    hematologist-oncologist Dr. Terenig Terjanian is interviewed about
    Bone Marrow Transplants, by visiting http://bit.ly/QxNcN1.

    Those with questions are invited to call the AAHPO hotline at
    (201) 546-6166. You can obtain a free cheek swab kit by e-mailing
    [email protected] or request a free kit from the National Bone
    Marrow Donor Registry by visiting www.marrow.org/Join.

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