Her kidneys are failing. Why this woman isn't counting on Ontario's organ wait list - Action News
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Her kidneys are failing. Why this woman isn't counting on Ontario's organ wait list

In an effort to avoid dialysis and the province's organ wait list, Simcoe, Ont., resident Christina Meyer, who was diagnosed with kidney disease at 18 and is now 50, has taken her search for a living donorto social media.

In 2021, over 1,000 people in Ontario, 3,000 across Canada were waiting for a kidney, stats show

Christina Meyer, 50, was diagnosed with Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease at age 18. Today she says her kidneys are operating at about 20 per cent capacity.
Christina Meyer, 50, was diagnosed with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease at age 18. Today, she says, her kidneys are operating at about 20 per cent capacity. (Submitted by Christina Meyer)

In an effort to avoid dialysis and the province's organ wait list, a woman from Simcoe, Ont., has taken her search for a living kidney donor to social media.

"Mynephrologist said, 'Don't put your eggs all in one basket,'" said Christina Meyer, 50, whose kidneys are currently operatingat about 20 per cent of normal ability. "I'm trying toavoid dialysis."

Meyermoved with her husband and daughter from Woodstock, Ont., in the last year, but her medical team is still based at the London Health Sciences Centre (LHSC), where doctors did 111 kidney transplants in 2022. Twenty-seven of them were from living donors.

"[My kidneys]started to fail around 40and it's just been slowly dropping ever since," said Meyer.

The lion's share of kidney transplants in Canada are from deceased donors.

However,transplants using kidneys from living donors usually lastlonger, and can reduce or prevent the patient's need for dialysis, according to Canadian Blood Services.

Themore people you get to step up, the more likely I'm going to find that perfect match.- Christina Meyer

At 18, Meyer was diagnosed with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), a genetic disorder thather mother succumbed to at 67after years of dialysis.

Christina Meyer, 50, with her husband Jonathan, who has begun the initial paperwork to find out if he might be a suitable match to donate a kidney to his wife.
Meyer with her husband Jonathan, who has begun the initial paperwork to find out if he might be a suitable match to donate a kidney to his wife. (Submitted by Christina Meyer)

Earlier this month, Meyer posted on Facebook about her diseaseand appealed to anyone who might be willing todonatea kidney.

"Themore people you get to step up and be a donor, the more likely I'm going to find that perfect match," she said.

Meyer is not currently on Ontario's organ transplant wait list because her estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) in other words, how well her kidneys are filtering toxins/waste from your blood has not dropped below the threshold, but she anticipates it won't be long before she'll need some kind of treatment.

Thousands on wait list

According to Ontario's Trillium Gift of Life Network,1,063 people in Ontario were waiting for a kidney transplantin the province in 2021.Across the country, the Canadian Institute for Health Information reports,3,060 people were waiting for a kidney that year,when atotal of 105 people died while waiting for a transplant.

"Decisions about a patient's placement on the wait list for an organ transplant (including kidneys) are based on how urgently the transplant is needed coupled with how long that patient has been on the wait list," a spokesperson with Ontario Health said in an email to CBC News.

"Patients who are clinically in most urgent need of a transplant would be prioritized."

Two people have already reached out to Meyer and are interested infinding out if they'd bea match for her various blood tests have to be conducted to determine that.

Both Meyer's sister and husband have also begun making inquiries to see if they'd be matches.

Matthew Weiss is the medical director for donation at Transplant Quebec and on the executive committee with the Canadian Donation and Transplantation Research Program.
Dr. Matthew Weiss is the medical director for donation at Transplant Qubec and on the executive committee with the Canadian Donation and Transplant Research Program. (Submitted by Dr. Matthew Weiss)

"It's a tricky thing in the system because we certainly don't want people to feel like their health depends on the popularity of a social media outreach," saidMatthew Weiss, medical director for donation at Transplant Qubecand executive committee member with the Canadian Donation and Transplantation Research Program.

"That being said, we wouldn't want to deny someone the possibilityto find a donor by going through channels such as a public appeal," said Weiss.

Meyer is justified in trying to finda living donor, he said.

"If you can avoid dialysis,not only are you making a massive difference in the quality of that person's life, but you are saving a tonne of money."

Weiss said the health-care system isspared $50,000 a year for every person kept off dialysis.

Here's Christina Myer's social media post:

As in many areas of health care, the COVID-19 pandemic has added pressures to managing organ donations across Canadaespecially if multiple donors become available at once, Weiss said.

"Most organ donation co-ordinators who do a lot of the work, most of those come from a nursing background, and as everyone knows, there's a shortage of nurses everywhere, and so trying to recruit nurses to any field is a challenge," he said.

"It has definitely worsened our capacities."