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E-mail CRI, July 12, 2015
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| Liu Zhiwen (L), a volunteer donor from the China Marrow Donor Program, hands over the hemopoietic stem cells he donates to an Indian representative at a hospital in Beijing on July 10, 2015. [Photo: cnr.cn] |
The stem cells donated by a Chinese man have been transplanted into a 16-year-old Indian boy suffering from leukemia.
Vimarsh Raina, a medical expert in New Delhi who helped with the operation, says the Indian teenager is in stable condition.
The donor, 37-year-old volunteer of China Marrow Donor Program, says he never expected to save a foreigner when he joined the CMDP in 2012.
"It's unexpected to have my bone marrow samples matched with a foreign person. It's a gift for my life. As the father of a 12-year-old child, I understand the feelings of the Indian boy's parents. I just want to help."
The transplant took place on Saturday morning, shortly after the stem cells arrived in India from China.
The chance of two non-relatives having stem cells matched can be less than one in tens of thousands.
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