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‘My one in six million condition makes walking feel like stepping on hot coals’

Doctors told Dominic that without treatment he had days to live

Eleanor Fleming
Monday 25 March 2024 09:10 GMT
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Dominic wants to give back to the charity that 'saved (his) life' (Collect/PA Real Life)
Dominic wants to give back to the charity that 'saved (his) life' (Collect/PA Real Life) (P)

A young sportsman who was diagnosed with a “one in six million” condition which makes him feel like he is walking on “hot coals” due to nerve damage in his feet is preparing to tackle the London Marathon for the charity that saved his life.

On New Year’s Eve in 2015, Dominic Moore, a 28-year-old who lives in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, was out partying and “enjoying life” – but just three days later, he noticed bruises all over his body and blood blisters in his mouth.

Given his mother Sarah, 50, is a nurse, this raised alarm bells and they booked a GP appointment – but Dominic, who works as a roster executive at the airline Jet2, was sent home with medication for depression.

Dominic visited another GP days later and, after numerous tests, the then 20-year-old was diagnosed with aplastic anaemia – a condition that means your bone marrow cannot make enough new blood cells – at Huddersfield Royal Infirmary in January 2016.

Doctors soon told him that without treatment he had days to live.

“I’d literally gone from being a healthy footballer, just living life at 20 years old, to that all disappearing overnight,” Dominic told PA Real Life.

He started treatment straight away at the Teenage Cancer Trust unit at St James’s University Hospital in Leeds, which included chemotherapy, a bone marrow transplant from an American donor, and countless platelet and blood transfusions.

Dominic experienced allergic reactions to platelets during treatments (Collect/PA Real Life) (PA)

While Dominic’s health has improved post-transplant, he has been left with several side effects from his treatments, such as nerve damage in his feet, which creates a “burning” sensation every time he walks.

Dominic was told by doctors he was on “death’s door” multiple times throughout his time in hospital – but now, he has challenged himself to run the 2024 TCS London Marathon to give back to the charity Teenage Cancer Trust.

“The main message is, there is a positive side after you’ve been through the treatment and I’m proof of that,” Dominic said.

“Granted, not everyone makes it, but you’ve got to be strong. You’ve got to make sure that you’re the person that survives it, you’ve got to put yourself first, and you’ve got to do everything you can.

“There were so many times I was told I’d probably die, but I’m not dead and look at me now.”

When Dominic was diagnosed with aplastic anaemia in January 2016, he was transferred to the Teenage Cancer Trust unit at St James’s University Hospital in Leeds, where he received treatment for the following two years.

He said he was told by doctors that aplastic anaemia affects “one in six million” people and he was one of five people with the condition in the UK at the time.

Dominic showing the bruises on his body on his first night in hospital (Collect/PA Real Life) (PA)

Dominic underwent platelet and blood transfusions every day for six months, along with six rounds of chemotherapy – but this “all failed” and doctors then looked to a bone marrow transplant as the next step in his treatment plan.

Given his brothers were not a match for the transplant, doctors contacted the charity Anthony Nolan and there were three suitable donors across the world on the register – in England, Germany, and the US.

The anonymous American donor was the closest match, so they planned for the transplant to go ahead in September 2016, but this was delayed to the following month due to a system outage.

It was at this point Dominic was told he was on “death’s door” and he may only have a few days to live, and his family even considered paying to fly him to America for the transplant – but Dominic was determined.

“Life is precious and I went to six funerals in that first year, from getting close to people (on the ward) and people dying,” Dominic said.

“When you’ve been to so many funerals, and so many people have died who you’ve got really close to, you haven’t got time to moan and complain.

“You’re going to be upset, you’re on death’s door, but you can’t feel sorry for yourself because as long as you’re alive, there’s always someone worse off.”

In October 2016, Dominic underwent the bone marrow transplant, which replaces bone marrow with healthy cells, and he said it only took around five minutes to complete the treatment.

“As it stands now, I’m 98% American, which is brilliant,” he said.

However, post-transplant Dominic remained on the ward for 40 days as he developed Graft-versus-host disease – where white blood cells attack the patient’s body.

He was taking 65 tablets a day at one point, including a trial drug called Rituximab which he responded positively to, and his health gradually started to improve from there.

Dominic has been left with several side effects from his treatments however, as he has “a low platelet count”, and this means he can no longer play contact sports due to the risk of “blood clots and bleeds on the brain”.

His toenails expanded due to the chemotherapy as well, leading to two nails being removed, and he sustained nerve damage in his feet which means it feels like he is walking “on fire or hot coals”.

Dominic had a procedure to remove two toenails (Collect/PA Real Life) (PA)

“I’ve got a really low platelet count – it does go up, and at the moment I have once a year check-ins, but they’re nowhere near where they should be,” Dominic explained.

“It means I can’t do contact sports again, which is massive for me as I was a footballer before – but it’s not the end of the world, I’m still here.”

Dominic said he believes his positive mindset, along with the “amazing work and facilities” at the Teenage Cancer Trust unit, helped him through the most challenging times.

With a juke box, pizza nights, PlayStation 4 and pool competitions on the ward, it helped him “forget” he was in hospital and it gave him the motivation to keep going and focus on “surviving”.

Although Dominic felt like he had to “start from zero” after all his treatments ended – learning how to adjust to a new “normal” and returning to work four years after his diagnosis – he said he has a newfound “appreciation” for life.

Now, he wants to thank his American bone marrow donor, as he “wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for him”, and to give back to the Teenage Cancer Trust and its staff at the hospital as “they are second to none”.

Dominic will be completing this year's marathon with his friend Jamie (Collect/PA Real Life) (PA)

He has since challenged himself to run the 2024 TCS London Marathon for a second time, having raised more than £4,000 for the charity by completing the event last year, and he will be participating with his friend Jamie this time around.

Although Dominic “hates” running, he feels it is important to challenge himself and give back to those who “saved (his) life”.

“It is literally like running on coals, so doing that for five hours will be excruciating. I’d say it’s 10 out of 10 pain,” Dominic said.

“But you’ve got to push yourself in life, you’ve got to challenge yourself.

“I live on challenging myself, I don’t want to get stagnant in life, and running the London Marathon is a challenge that I want to complete, and it’s mainly for the ward.

“For the people after me, they need to keep that ward going… they’ve saved my life so the least I can do is try to raise some funds for them to keep it going.”

Teenage Cancer Trust’s challenge events raise vital funds to support young people like Dominic through treatment.

To find out more, visit: teenagecancertrust.org/challenges, and to donate to Dominic’s JustGiving page, visit: justgiving.com/fundraising/jamie-wilkinson6 .

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