ALMOST 5,000 people queued for hours in the rain to get tested to see if they were a match to help save the life of a five-year-old boy fighting a rare cancer.

The potential donors volunteered to help brave Oscar Saxelby-Lee following a desperate plea from his parents.

9 Some of the 4,800 donors that queued through the gates of Pitmaston Primary School, Worcester Credit: SWNS:South West News Service

9 Oscar Saxelby-Lee was diagnosed with an aggressive and rare form of leukaemia last December Credit: Facebook

9 Oscar is in urgent need of a stem cell donor as he now has 'two weeks to live' Credit: SWNS:South West News Service

The youngster is in a race against time to find a life-saving stem cell donor after he was diagnosed with rare cancer.

Oscar was diagnosed with the aggressive form of leukaemia after bruising turned out to be cancer on December 28 last year.



RACE AGAINST TIME

Doctors say he now has just three months to find a stem-cell match which could save his life.

Over 4,800 donors queued up to get tested after Pitmaston Primary School, in Worcester, opened their doors for a donor search over the weekend.

Family friend Lin Forward told the Sun Online that Oscar's mum Olivia has been "amazing" while enduring "every parent's worst nightmare".

She said: "Little Oscar is in a poorly way at the moment. Normally he had been able to get to the hospital shop on a walking frame, but now he's in isolation and can't even eat.

'TRUE WARRIOR'

"Libby [Olivia] has been absolutely amazing. She's been at the hospital all the time, and is really trying to keep positive.

"It's just every parent's worst nightmare."

His teacher Sarah Keating said: "I've been teaching for 20 years and I've never had a child go through something like this.

"You hear about children getting cancer and you think 'that's dreadful', then you move on. In this case we haven't moved on, we will fight this."

STEM CELL TRANSPLANTS FOR T-ALL PATIENTS A blood stem cell transplant, technically known as a hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), is a procedure used to treat people with life-threatening diseases. Patients with certain cancers may usuallly have to undergo very high doses of chemotherapy and or total body irradiation. But this type of treatment destroys the blood stem cells, alongside the diseased cells. If the chemo or radiation doesn’t cure the T-ALL, younger and fitter patients are given the option of having a stem cell transplant. The patient will have stem cells enter their bloodstream through a drip. This will allow the cells to find their way back into the patient’s bone marrow, where they were before they were destroyed by unsuccessful chemo or radiation treatment. More than 50,000 people across the world undergo a blood stem cell transplant every year.

And his teaching assistant Laura Senter, 22, said his diagnosis came as a shock to their class.

She added: "I couldn't believe it. I saw him before Christmas and he was his usual happy-go-lucky self.

"It's a nightmare for this to happen. You can't really do anything about it, it's heart-breaking.

"If a child falls over and cuts their knee you can put a plaster on it. With something like this you can't just fix it.

"That's why we have gone into 'action mode' to try and find a donor."

Oscar's cheeky smile, bravery and determination, has pushed us to to pull our strength together again Oscar's mum Olivia

His desperate parents Olivia Saxelby and Jamie Lee, of St Johns, Worcester, launched an appeal to find a match after his diagnosis.

They aimed to get as many people as possible to sign up to a blood stem cell donor register as part of a campaign called 'Hand in Hand for Oscar'.

Olivia, 23, said: "We felt like we could not see light at the end of the tunnel, but when looking at Oscar's cheeky smile, bravery and determination, we managed to pull our strength together again.

"Not once has he shown weakness, nor has he ceased to amaze us throughout the most difficult times and that to us is a true warrior."

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DKMS, the charity that tests the swabs, said its record for the highest number of people to take part in a registration event is 2,200 people.

Volunteers were sat at tables and chairs in two of the school's halls over the weekend, handing out swabs and completing donor registration forms.

9 Oscar with his mum Olivia, and dad at Birmingham Children's Hospital Credit: SWNS:South West News Service

9 Oscar's mum Olivia described him as a fun, loving, energetic five-year-old boy Credit: SWNS:South West News Service

9 Brave Oscar is currently in an isolation unit at Birmingham Children's Hopsital Credit: SWNS:South West News Service

9 A family friend has said the once bubbly young boy is now struggling to eat, as his condition continues to worsen Credit: Facebook

9 Oscar smiles despite his race against time to find a life-saving stem cell donor Credit: SWNS:South West News Service

9 Volunteers were sat in two of the school's halls over the weekend, handing out swabs and completing donor registration forms Credit: SWNS:South West News Service

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