This is the end of Thanksgiving week, and we have a lot to be thankful for this year: Our boy went into remission again, matched with a willing bone marrow donor, underwent transplant, survived the initial post-transplant period, and got to return home and cautiously, hopefully, tiptoe back toward resuming some of the activities he liked to do before he relapsed in February. He was--is--fortunate to have made it this far, and so are we. And even if he continues improving at the same rate and enjoys the same incredible good fortune he's already had, he'll still have a long and difficult road ahead.
But this isn't the time to speculate about the perils to come, or to dwell on the unpleasant parts of the past year. It's a time to give thanks, and to say that we are very thankful that Phin is still here and that you all have chosen to walk this road with us.
Medical Updates
At his most recent visit to Atlanta a week ago, Phin got five teeth extracted by the dental team that did the extractions he got over the summer. Then, he went to CHOA for his clinic checkup.
At his clinic checkup, we were told that his counts look good and that things still appear to be going according to plan. Still, we've found that it can be difficult to get definite answers, particularly about what he's allowed to (safely) do and when he'll be able to do things like go back to school or gather with larger groups of family and friends. This makes it very frustrating to plan. But on the plus side, he came through a relapse and a bone marrow transplant this year, and we've arrived at a spot where resuming those things I mentioned are even conceivable. I remind myself of that anytime I feel frustrated. That we're even talking about it is a blessing.
Also, a couple days after Neesha and Phin returned from Atlanta last time, Phin started sleeping in later and telling us he wasn't hungry at mealtimes. Those were some of the first signs, both times Phin was sick. Sick sick, I mean. This happened around the same time his new chimerism results showed up. To refresh everyone's memories about chimerism, it's the percentage of cells in Phin that came from the marrow he received from his donor--two kinds, both ideally at 100% from the donor. Alarmingly (to us), one of those results which had been at 100% had fallen to 98%. We're told this is within the margin of error on the test, and that sometimes these percentages wobble a little as his donated cells try to annihilate the remnants of his old immune system in what's called Graft vs. Host Disease, or GVHD. But that lower chimerism result, coupled with the sleepiness and loss of appetite, was too much for us. So even though he'd just had his blood drawn for labs in Atlanta, back he went (to the clinic here, thankfully) for additional labs. And of course he was a trooper for that blood draw, too.And, thankfully, his counts were good. Again.
"Probably just a bug," the physician said upon seeing the results.
"Probably just a bug," we repeated.
Phin On the Daily
I'll mix it up for a change on this part and pass the mic to Neesha, who posted the following on the Phin Phans social media accounts a couple of days ago. It's about sharing Thanksgiving day with Aspen and her family.
I know that many of you have been thinking about Aspen and holding her close in your hearts, and I would encourage you to continue to do that as she prepares for her bone marrow transplant. I can report that a matching bone marrow donor has been identified for her, and that Aspen's donor, like Phin's, is someone unknown to the family--a person willing to put themself on the bone marrow registry to save the life of a child they don't even know. So now, at the end of Thanksgiving week, to everyone out there who has joined the bone marrow registry just in the hope that maybe someday you'll be the one that matches up and gets to save a life, thank you. I type the words with tears in my eyes. Thank you so, so much.
Okay. Here's Neesha:
And, before this day is over, we want to say “thank you” to you, too. We are thankful every, single day for each one of you: the strength, love, compassion, support, and countless ways you show up for us. There will never be enough days or ways to express how thankful we are. Happy Thanksgiving, Pham.
I have been praying for Aspen and am overjoyed that this young person will also receive a bone marrow transplant (what an answer to prayer!) may the same success occur for Aspen ππΏππΏ
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