Manitoba teams march raise 25K for blood cancer research
A Winnipeg woman is determined to continue raising awareness for an incurable cancer after her mom was diagnosed three years ago.
In 2018, Maria Marinelliâs mother, Carol Porco, learned she had multiple myeloma â" a common although relatively unknown type of blood cancer â" after being misdiagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis fives years earlier.
Learning about her motherâs diagnosis was a frightening experience, Marinelli told Global News on Saturday, partly because theyâd never heard of the cancer before, despite the disease affecting nine new Canadians every day.
Read more: Cancer care still seeing delays as COVID-19 weighs down hospitals: survey
An estimated 3,400 Canadians were diagnosed with the disease in 2020, according to the Canadian Cancer Society.
Marinelli channeled her devastation into using her professional skills as an event planner, and now, this is Marinelliâs second year organizing Winnipegâs 11th annual Multiple Myeloma March. As team captain, she led her mother and their family in a march around the Transcona neighbourhood on Sunday.
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Maria Marinelli channeled the devastation from her motherâs 2018 diagnosis into using her professional skills as an event planner to organize Winnipegâs 11th annual Multiple Myeloma March. Maria Marinelli / SuppliedAbout a couple dozen team members, donning grey T-shirts reading âCarolâs Crusadersâ walked from Madeline Street to Regent Ave., then Day Street onto Kildare Ave., joining 32 other communities across the country participating in the non-profit Myeloma Canadaâs 13th annual fundraiser.
âThe walk is so important for the community. (It) gives patients that extra support system,â Marinelli said. âWe learned very quickly the treatment options were paramount in giving patients the gift of time, so getting involved with the walk was just our way to give back and help raise funds and awareness.â
The fundraiser collects money for alternate treatments and research, she said, so that when patients go into remission, they have other treatment options available to them.
Carolâs Crusaders are hoping to raise $5,000, adding to Winnipegâs overall goal of $50,000 and Canadaâs goal of $600,000. So far, local teams have raised a combined total of more than $25,000.
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On the charityâs website, Myeloma Canada says there are no cures for the disease. However, advances in research and treatment are extending and improving the lives of those affected.
After Porcoâs diagnosis, she underwent chemotherapy along with a stem cell transplant, which was successful. Porco, a mother of four and step-mother to five, now visits her doctor every two to three months.
âWeâre extremely lucky that my mother responded well to her stem cell transplant,â Marinelli said in a news release on Wednesday. âBut weâre all deeply aware that sheâs still living on borrowed time and that thereâs still no cure for her.â
âThis is why raising awareness and funds to find a cure is so important.â
© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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