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Media Coverage

For-Giving Technology
Megan Rosenfeld
July 11, 1996
One of the most heart-rending home pages we've seen is the one
dedicated to Henry Strongin Goldberg, an 8-month-old local child
with Fanconi's anemia. This rare genetic disorder (one in every
100,000 births) is a precursor to bone marrow failure and the likely
onset of aplastic anemia and leukemia.
His parents, Allen Goldberg and Laurie Strongin, started the page
to raise money for research and to connect with other parents and
well wishers. So far they have collected $68,000 for the Oregon-based
Fanconia Anemia Research Fund Inc. They've also gotten much e-mail
encouragement. "It was like a message in a bottle that we cast
into the cyber-sea. The response has been incredible," Goldberg
says.
Henry's Home Page includes articles about the disorder and the
support group, and some very cute pictures of Henry and his parents.
One of the articles is about a procedure that has helped extend
the lives of other Fanconi patients. It is a cord blood transplant,
in which blood from the umbilical cord of a newborn is transplanted
instead of bone marrow to renew the immune system of the Fanconi
sufferer.
Goldberg and Strongin had hoped that their second child, who is
currently in utero, would be a perfect match for a transplant for
Henry. The good news, they learned recently, is that the fetus is
not carrying Fanconi's anemia; the bad news was that the baby is
not a genetic match for Henry. However, there are five perfect matches
in the national registry of frozen cord blood transplants, and he
will be able to get one when it is medically appropriate.
The Food and Drug Administration has recently proposed to regulate
this cord blood as though it were an experimental drug, and advocates
of the procedure oppose this, saying that such regulation would
make it far more difficult for most patients to get it. Henry's
Home Page includes material about this debate and a request for
readers to lobby the FDA. (July 26 is the last day for comments.)
Goldberg, who is the official webmeister at the National Association
of Broadcasters, said he has learned an enormous amount from using
the Internet, especially after Henry was first diagnosed and doctors
were deluging them with technical information.
Henry has already survived heart surgery to correct a hole that
was a result of Fanconi's. He was also born with an extra thumb;
many children are born with more severe abnormalities. Except for
that, and a somewhat small stature, he is developing normally, and
his father says he "has a smile too big for his face."
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