Multiracial patients must 'win the lottery' to find bone marrow match
By Erin Texeira
©2005 The Associated Press
February 2, 2005
Luke Do was a lively 18-month-old awaiting the birth of his first sibling
when he was diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia.
The hopes of his parents, both doctors in San Jose, immediately turned to a
bone marrow transplant, but they soon learned some distressing news -- Luke's
ethnic heritage made him a tough match.
Sarah Gaskins, Luke's mother, has Japanese and European ancestors and his
father, Lam Do, is Vietnamese-American. Because bone marrow matches usually are
made with a relative or someone with the same racial or ethnic background as the
patient, multiracial people rarely have success.
"It's tragic," said Lam Do, who specializes in internal medicine.
"Your chance of finding a donor is so low, it's like winning the lottery.
And most people are unaware of this."
For years, the medical community has pushed for increased donor registry
among racial minorities to improve survival rates for leukemia, lymphoma and
other blood diseases. But to the general public, the situation is little known.
Only 2 percent of those who list their ancestry with the National Marrow
Donor Program are multiracial, though the NMDP will -- for the first time --
study multiracial patients' medical records this year to better understand what
kind of marrow tissue they tend to inherit from their parents. The group also
will try to more effectively recruit new potential donors, said Helen Ng, an
NMDP spokeswoman.
"Using the patient information we have access to, we're trying to
understand a little better the issues they face," said Ng, whose group,
with 5.6 million potential donors registered, has the largest such list in the
world.
Matt Kelley, president of Mavin Foundation, a Seattle-based advocacy group
for multiracial people, says the inattention to the problem reflects society's
reluctance to accept today's increasingly complex racial landscape.
"It's a headache," said Kelley, whose group has an ongoing bone
marrow program. "The reality is many organizations are afraid of addressing
race period -- they don't feel competent or comfortable -- and when it comes to
addressing mixed heritage issues, they don't want to go there, either."
Today, whites in need of a bone marrow transplant have about a 90 percent
chance of finding a match, said Dr. Patrick Beatty, an oncologist with the
Montana Cancer Specialists in Missoula, Mont., who researches ancestry and bone
marrow. For those who aren't white, "your chances of getting a match are
pretty remote," he said.
The biological reason has to do with the body's response to infections,
Beatty said. Because the world's ancient peoples were exposed to different
diseases over millennia, each group developed different tissue antigens,
substances that help fight illness.
The descendants of these peoples retain those highly varied tissue antigens,
he said, making it tough to match the bone marrow of individuals from different
ancestries.
Luke Do's family was elated when, about six months after his diagnosis, they
learned a marrow match had been found for the boy with a Japanese-American
police officer in Seattle.
Luke struggled for months after the transfusion, nearly dying three times,
but hung on in the end. Now the Dos are making plans for him to start
kindergarten in the fall -- and to celebrate the third anniversary of his
transplant on March 18.
The Rivera family of Los Altos is still hoping for a happy ending.
Chris Rivera, 24, has fought leukemia with chemotherapy for six years. Chris,
who also has Down Syndrome, thrived until last October when he was diagnosed
with a more lethal form of the blood cancer. He desperately needs a bone marrow
transplant within the next year, according to his mother, Kathy Rivera.
"It's so sad, but he's not a very good candidate for a match and it has
nothing to do with the fact that he has Down Syndrome," she said.
"It's because my husband is Puerto Rican, and I'm of northern European
heritage."
Like many others, the family is scouring the community, posting messages on
the Internet and praying a match will be found. They regularly help organize
bone marrow registry drives, hoping one will beat the odds and turn up the right
tissue.