Vancouver Island father dies of leukemia after battle to find mixed-race stem cell donor – Agassiz-Harrison Observer


A Saanich father who fought to grow the data bank of mixed-race stem cell donors has died of leukemia.

Jeremy Chow was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia in November 2018. While chemotherapy treatment worked and Jeremy entered remission, doctors advised that stem cell therapy would be the best possible treatment to eradicate the risk of returning cancer cells.

But when Jeremy and his wife Evelyn Chow began their quest to find a match, they learned there were virtually no donors in the national or worldwide registry who matched Jeremys genetic makeup a requirement for a successful stem cell transplant.

READ ALSO: In a fight against cancer, Victoria mans only stem cell match was his own donation

Ironically, Jeremy had applied to become a stem cell donor years earlier. When doctors searched the database they found one unusable match: his own donation. Shocked and saddened by the lack of options, the family spearheaded the Match4Jeremy campaign, organizing stem cell drives and raising awareness of the dire need for mixed race and Asian donors.

On Aug. 8, 2019, the family learned that Jeremys cancer had returned. But the Chows battle to find a match didnt slow down. They worked with the Otherhalf-Chinese Stem Cell Initiative to host an emergency stem cell drive in Vancouver that month.

Despite their tireless efforts, Jeremy did not recover from the second round of cancer. The father of two died on May 30 with his wife at his side.

On a GoFundMe page aimed at raising money for his daughters educations, family friend Jenny Leung says Jeremy fought hard and did it with grace, humour and a positive attitude.

READ ALSO: Stem cell donor with rare genetic makeup needed to save Saanich man after cancer returns

Jeremys priority was always being able to provide and take care of his family, Leung writes. He was so involved with his girls lives, from driving them to their extracurricular activities to attending school fairs, to braiding their hair and explaining to them the importance of a good education.

He was always looking for a way to care for those around him whether it meant sharing knowledge, offering a helping hand, or just being there in any way he could, she added. Jeremy was truly someone to look up to and although he was always supporting others, he rarely asked for anything in return.

While the Chow family fought for a match for Jeremy, their crusade for stem cell donors gained momentum when they realized just how dire the situation was for mixed-race and Asian Canadians. Only three per cent of the Canadian Blood Services stem cell registry is mixed race.

In March 2019, Jeremy spoke with Black Press Media.

If all of this goes well [and] I stay in remission, and the awareness is out there and other people sign up to be donors and other people are getting the help they need, then thats a win, he said.

Donations are being accepted via GoFundMe to support Jeremys family and his daughters future education.

READ ALSO: Victoria couple continues fight for increased diversity in Canadian stem cell registry

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Vancouver Island father dies of leukemia after battle to find mixed-race stem cell donor - Agassiz-Harrison Observer

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