Lion-hearted fighter beats the odds – The Straits Times
By Sykes24Tracey
Ten-year-old Boon Kye Feng prances around the living room in furry purple pants that match the lion's head he is wearing.
He lifts the head and moves it from side to side to a beat only he can hear.
Even when the little lion gets thirsty, he drinks water through the opening in the head.
Seeing him at play, it may be difficult for strangers to tell that he has spent almost half his life battling leukaemia.
His family fought it along with him, gifting two transplants - cord blood from his baby sister and stem cells from his mother - to keep him alive.
MIRACLE BOY
I believe Kye Feng is a 'miracle'. We have all learnt a lot from him, not only in the science of managing the disease and the doctor-patient relationship, but also in his love of life, and his fearlessness and resilience, despite the years of pain and suffering.
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR TAN POH LIN, from the paediatric haematology- oncology division of NUH.
Despite the intensive treatment, his parents said he had remained positive and playful.
It had started in late 2011 when Kye Feng developed spots and bruises which his parents thought were sandfly bites.
When the spots appeared a second time, his mother, Mrs Celine Boon, decided to take him for a check-up.
Doctors found that his white blood cell count was very high and told the family he could have leukaemia (cancer of the blood).
It was diagnosed as juvenile myelomonocytic leukaemia (JMML), a rare form of the disease.
But Mrs Boon, 38, was not too surprised.
This was because Kye Feng and his twin brother, Kye Teck, had previously developed juvenile xanthogranuloma (JXG), a skin disorder that is usually benign and self-limiting.
They also have an older sister, now 16, who was unaffected.
While reading up on JXG earlier, Mrs Boon had come across a potential link to JMML.
She said: "Still, I had never expected that it would happen to my son. I was quite alarmed."
JMML is so rare that blood samples had to be sent to Germany to confirm the diagnosis.
Kye Feng began chemotherapy at KK Women's and Children's Hospital (KKH) in 2012 to control the condition while waiting for a bone marrow transplant.
Although KKH doctors had not seen a JMML case in about 10 years, they did the transplant as there were few other options.
His father, Mr Roy Boon, 46, said: "It was all trial and error. There's no exact treatment for JMML."
Mrs Boon was then pregnant with their fourth child and doctors said the baby girl's cord blood could be used for the transplant as there is a 25 per cent chance of a match between siblings.
Juvenile myelomonocytic leukaemia (JMML) is a very rare form of childhood leukaemia. The hallmark symptom of the disease is the increased number of white blood cells known as monocytes.
Normal monocytes protect the body from infections, but those in patients with this leukaemia are cancerous and reproduce uncontrollably. The monocytes may then infiltrate organs such as the liver, spleen, lungs, lymph nodes and even skin.
In Western countries, one in a million children are afflicted with the disease each year. Based on Singapore population statistics last year, there is an average of one case every three years.
For the majority of JMML patients, a haematopoietic - or blood forming - stem cell transplant (HSCT) is the only curative option.
Stem cells are cells that have the potential for self-renewal and differentiation. They can develop into different forms, including white blood cells, red blood cells and platelets. Such a transplant can help patients develop new and healthy blood cells.
Stem cells can be found in the bone marrow, blood, fat tissue and placenta. They are abundant in the bone marrow but, even so, make up only 1 per cent of all cells there.
They can be "harvested" directly from the bone marrow or from the blood, whether they are from an adult volunteer or from umbilical cord blood.
The bone marrow must be stimulated to coax or force the stem cells into the peripheral blood system, but techniques are well-tested and safe.
After undergoing HSCT, 50 per cent of the patients will go on to become long-term survivors.
Abigail Ng
Source: Associate Professor Tan Poh Lin, senior consultant at the division of paediatric haematology-oncology, National University Hospital.
Thankfully, it was a full match for Kye Feng, who had the transplant and recovered well.
He looked forward to starting Primary 1 with his brother.
But before the March holidays of his first year in school, doctors noticed that the percentage of donor cells in him was beginning to fall, signalling that there could be a problem.
When it became clear that the cancer had returned, Mrs Boon said she broke down and cried.
"I was shocked. There weren't any physical symptoms. Why did it happen so quickly? It wasn't even one year after the transplant and things had looked so promising," she said.
A SECOND CHANCE
The family sought a second opinion from the National University Hospital (NUH) and entered into the care of Associate Professor Tan Poh Lin from the paediatric haematology-oncology division.
While doctors from both hospitals suggested a second transplant for Kye Feng, there was more bad news.
His illness was mutating into mixed-phenotype acute leukaemia, a combination of two forms of cancer.
He also faced a life-threatening infection that caused high fever and bloating.
Besides beginning palliative care to improve his quality of life, the family continued to push for treatment, including natural killer-cell therapy and the removal of Kye Feng's enlarged spleen in a complicated seven-hour operation.
Even though the test results showed that leukaemic cells remained in his bone marrow, Kye Feng had a second transplant in September 2015, this time using stem cells from his mother.
Doctors usually recommend transplants only when patients register no leukaemic cells.
Mrs Boon said: "If he didn't have the transplant, he would have only six months more. With the transplant, he would at least have a chance of recovery.
"He was fighting hard. If I didn't give him the chance, I would never know if he could have survived."
Kye Feng responded well to his mother's stem cells.
Dr Tan said: "I believe Kye Feng is a 'miracle'. We have all learnt a lot from him, not only in the science of managing the disease and the doctor-patient relationship, but also in his love of life, and his fearlessness and resilience, despite the years of pain and suffering."
The crucial three months after the transplant passed by without issue, but the boy developed a graft versus host disease (GVHD) one year later.
Still, his parents were relieved that it was not a second relapse.
He was put on medication for GVHD and will recover completely.
In the meantime, the family is treasuring the time they can spend together.
Mrs Boon said: "We will relax and go with the flow, as long as Kye Feng is happy."
Original post:
Lion-hearted fighter beats the odds - The Straits Times
- 5 year old boy from Iraq undergoes world's first of its kind bone marrow transplantation in India - The Times of India - March 31st, 2025
- Superior outcomes of haploidentical hematopoietic cell transplantation over chemotherapy in AML patients 55 years or older - Nature.com - March 31st, 2025
- Blood and Marrow Transplantation and Cellular Therapy Center - NYU Langone Health - March 22nd, 2025
- Bone Marrow Transplantation Market Poised to Achieve USD 14,336 Billion by 2031 - Persistence Market Research - openPR - March 22nd, 2025
- BioRestorative Therapies to Report 2024 Financial Results and Host Conference Call on March 27, 2025 - The Manila Times - March 22nd, 2025
- Man Cured Of Sickle Cell Disease In New York Thanks To New Gene Therapy - Forbes - March 22nd, 2025
- Boost in cancer treatment: PGI working on lab for stem cell, gene therapies - The Times of India - March 22nd, 2025
- Clonal dynamics and somatic evolution of haematopoiesis in mouse - Nature.com - March 11th, 2025
- Mitochondria-enriched hematopoietic stem cells exhibit elevated self-renewal capabilities, thriving within the context of aged bone marrow -... - March 11th, 2025
- TET2 deficiency increases the competitive advantage of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells through upregulation of thrombopoietin receptor... - March 11th, 2025
- Garuda Therapeutics Closes $50 Million Series A-1 Financing to Advance Off-the-Shelf Blood Stem Cell Therapies - GlobeNewswire - March 11th, 2025
- Abu Dhabi Stem Cells Center and Yas Clinic first in UAE to receive AABB accreditation for haematopoietic progenitor cell collection - Abu Dhabi Media... - March 11th, 2025
- Discovery of lung-based blood stem cells may transform transplant therapies - Medical Xpress - March 1st, 2025
- VUMC part of new study validating curative therapy for sickle cell disease - VUMC Reporter - March 1st, 2025
- What Is the Role of MRD Testing Before HSCT in MDS/MPN? - DocWire News - March 1st, 2025
- Melphalan-based conditioning with post-transplant cyclophosphamide for peripheral blood stem cell transplantation: donor effect - Nature.com - March 1st, 2025
- Mesenchymal Stem Cells Market Projected to Reach USD 11.26 Billion by 2034, Growing at a CAGR of 12.9% - openPR - March 1st, 2025
- See snazzy slugs in all their luminous glory Februarys best science images - Nature.com - March 1st, 2025
- On the origin of neutrophils - Nature.com - March 1st, 2025
- Four-year-old donates stem cells to save her baby sister from blood cancer in Odisha - The Hindu - February 20th, 2025
- Effect of pre-transplant cytoreductive therapy on the outcomes of patients with MDS or secondary AML evolving from MDS undergoing allo-HSCT: a... - February 20th, 2025
- A heart disease trigger that lurks inside bone marrow - Harvard Health - February 20th, 2025
- 4-year-old donates stem cells to save sister as SCB performs first-of-a-kind bone marrow transplant in Odisha - OTV News - February 20th, 2025
- KU Cancer Center recognized for transplant that saved 1-year-olds life - WDAF FOX4 Kansas City - February 20th, 2025
- Orca-T With RIC Is Safe in Advanced Hematologic Malignancies - OncLive - February 20th, 2025
- SCB conducts Odisha's first bone marrow transplant on two-year-old - The New Indian Express - February 20th, 2025
- Bahrain's pioneering use of sickle cell disease treatment hailed by medical experts - The National - February 20th, 2025
- Cancer survivor is the first monumental bone marrow transplant patient in Baton Rouge in 8 years - NOLA.com - February 11th, 2025
- Autologous Cell Therapy Market to Hit Valuation of US$ 44.55 Billion By 2033 | Astute Analytica - GlobeNewswire - February 11th, 2025
- Nanoparticle that cuts middlemen could improve stem cell therapy - Futurity: Research News - January 31st, 2025
- GATA2 mutated allele specific expression is associated with a hyporesponsive state of HSC in GATA2 deficiency syndrome - Nature.com - January 31st, 2025
- Coordinated immune networks in leukemia bone marrow microenvironments distinguish response to cellular therapy - Science - January 31st, 2025
- How the bone marrow microbiome responds to immunotherapy - Chemical & Engineering News - January 31st, 2025
- My Experience With Stem Cell Therapy: Snake Oil or Silver Bullet? - GearJunkie - January 31st, 2025
- Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation - StatPearls - NCBI ... - January 22nd, 2025
- Doctors retrieve stem cells from 20-month-old to treat thalassaemic sister - The Times of India - January 22nd, 2025
- YolTech Therapeutics to Initiate a Clinical Trial for YOLT-204, a First-in-Class Bone Marrow-Targeted In Vivo Gene Editing Therapy for -Thalassemia -... - January 22nd, 2025
- School of Medicine professor receives grant to study improved cancer treatments - Mercer University - January 14th, 2025
- 1st stem cell therapy, new HIV drug approved - ecns - January 5th, 2025
- Suppression of thrombospondin-1mediated inflammaging prolongs hematopoietic health span - Science - January 5th, 2025
- A pilot raced through the airport to surprise an old friend: the woman who saved his life - CNN - December 27th, 2024
- Types of Stem Cell and Bone Marrow Transplants - December 27th, 2024
- Explained: What is mesenchymal stem cell therapy? - Drug Discovery News - December 18th, 2024
- Stem Cell Transplants Offer New Hope for Saving the Worlds Corals - Technology Networks - December 18th, 2024
- Scientists Present Research on Novel Cancer Therapies at ASH - City of Hope - December 18th, 2024
- Navigating CAR-T cell therapy long-term complications - Nature.com - December 18th, 2024
- High-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous stem cell transplant ineffective for patients with mantle cell lymphoma - News-Medical.Net - December 18th, 2024
- Stem Cell Therapy Market Is Expected To Reach Revenue Of - GlobeNewswire - December 18th, 2024
- The Importance of Cellular Therapy in the Clinical Case of a Young Man With a Challenging Precursor B-cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia - Cureus - December 18th, 2024
- A search for the perfect match, Apex six year old in need of donor - CBS17.com - December 18th, 2024
- New insights into survival of breast cancer cells in the bone marrow - News-Medical.Net - December 9th, 2024
- Cellular trafficking and fate mapping of cells within the nervous system after in utero hematopoietic cell transplantation - Nature.com - December 9th, 2024
- Saving lives, one stem cell at a time - Texas A&M The Battalion - December 9th, 2024
- Turn Biotechnologies Announces Landmark Study to Assess Effectiveness of ERA Therapy in Restoring Bone Marrow - PR Newswire UK - December 9th, 2024
- Orca Bio Presents Three-Year Survival Data with Orca-T in Patients with Hematological Malignancies at the 66th ASH Annual Meeting - Yahoo Finance - December 9th, 2024
- You are the match. How UNC student honored her late grandfather with life-saving effort - Raleigh News & Observer - November 29th, 2024
- scRNA-seq revealed transcriptional signatures of human umbilical cord primitive stem cells and their germ lineage origin regulated by imprinted genes... - November 29th, 2024
- Atlanta pilot with an aggressive cancer finds lifesaving help from a stranger and a simple test - The Atlanta Journal Constitution - November 29th, 2024
- Researchers have brought the promise of stem cell therapies closer to reality - The Week - November 29th, 2024
- Bone Marrow Donors Can Be Hard to Find. One Company Is Turning to ... - November 15th, 2024
- Hematopoietic Stem Cells and Their Niche in Bone Marrow - November 15th, 2024
- Bone Marrow Transplant Program - Overview - Mayo Clinic - November 15th, 2024
- Bone Marrow Donors Can Be Hard to Find. One Company Is Turning to Cadavers - WIRED - November 15th, 2024
- More stem cells for sickle cell gene therapy readied with motixafortide - Sickle Cell Disease News - November 15th, 2024
- Skull bone marrow expands throughout life and remains healthy during aging, researchers discover - Medical Xpress - November 15th, 2024
- Adult skull bone marrow is an expanding and resilient haematopoietic reservoir - Nature.com - November 15th, 2024
- Evaluation of standard fludarabine dosing and corresponding exposures in infants and young children undergoing hematopoietic cell transplantation -... - November 15th, 2024
- Stem cells grown in space show super powers but theres a catch - Study Finds - November 15th, 2024
- Getting a Stem Cell or Bone Marrow Transplant - October 21st, 2024
- Acquisition of durable insulin-producing cells from human adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a foundation for cell- based therapy of... - October 21st, 2024
- 1.5 Lakh Indians Register To Save Lives: Join the Mission To Fight Blood Cancer - The Better India - October 21st, 2024
- How Stem Cell and Bone Marrow Transplants Are Used to Treat Cancer - October 13th, 2024
- Stem Cell (Bone Marrow) Transplants - MD Anderson Cancer Center - October 13th, 2024
- Donating Bone Marrow and Stem Cells: The Process and What To Expect - October 13th, 2024
- What to expect as a stem cell or bone marrow donor - October 13th, 2024
- Structural organization of the bone marrow and its role in ... - October 13th, 2024
- Stem cell donor from down the road saved my life after global search - BBC.com - September 23rd, 2024
- Awaiting the call: family hopes to find blood stem cell donor - Claremont Courier - September 23rd, 2024
- Michigan woman one of first in world to successfully receive bone marrow from deceased donor - WDIV ClickOnDetroit - September 23rd, 2024
- Next-generation stem cell transplant: Revolutionizing a lifesaving cancer therapy - The Business Journals - September 23rd, 2024
