Munster woman fights aggressive leukemia – nwitimes.com
Kate Nierengarten would often get her hair cut and donate the locks to people who needed it because of a medical condition.
So when chemotherapy caused her to lose her hair, which she then donated, it wasn't out of the ordinary to her 6-year-old daughter and 4-year-old son.
"That was common vocabulary in our house," said Nierengarten, 33, of Munster. "My kids were excited. They thought I would get a red wig like Ariel. My son thought I was going to get a wig like Captain Hook. They helped cut my hair and shave my head when we got to that point."
Nierengarten was diagnosed in February with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a disease that usually affects kids and accounts for less than 1 percent of cancer cases.
She has since been undergoing aggressive chemotherapy at a downtown Chicago hospital. Her disease is now in remission.
But a potential cure lies in a stem cell transplant. However, through her family and a national database, she hasn't been able to find a perfect donor match.
So her friends have planned a stem cell donor drive in her honor Monday in Munster. Only 2 percent of the U.S. population is on the donor registry.
When: Monday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Where: Community Hospital cafeteria, 901 Macarthur Blvd. in Munster.
How: Donors fill out a form with personal information and take a cheek swab.
If you can't make it, register online at dkms.org/en/register.
"My greatest hope for this is we find a match for her. That would be amazing and a miracle," said Katie Huray, a friend of Nierengarten's who lives in St. John. "But hopefully we find a match for somebody. It would be pretty awesome if we could save a life out of this."
Huray described Nierengarten as a kind person, a loving mother, who would do the same thing for any of her friends if the situation was reversed.
"When her daughter started kindergarten, she put a necklace on her that said 'kindness' and told her to find a kid who isn't sitting by anybody," Huray said, stopping to cry before composing herself, "and make sure you sit next to them."
Nierengarten's friends raised money for her by making T-shirts that said "Kindness for Kate" on the front and on the back: "Have courage and be kind."
Dr. Olga Frankfurt, a hematologist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, said Nierengarten's medical team is still deciding whether a stem cell transplant is in her best interests, since her disease is in remission and the transplant comes with a risk of complications. Having a perfect donor match would make that decision a little easier, though, she noted.
"She has had a great response and tolerated therapy well. At the moment, she's great," Frankfurt said. "We're just trying to figure out the best way to transition her from remission to cure."
In January, Nierengarten started feeling fatigued. She could only handle about 20 minutes of her regular hour-long workout. Eventually, she could only walk for a few minutes before she had to sit down.
A doctor found she had an enlarged spleen. She was sent to the emergency room, where she got a biopsy because her lymph nodes were swollen. She got the diagnosis of leukemia.
She was initially at Northwestern for five weeks. Since then, she's been traveling back and forth to the hospital, sometimes staying there for days while the medical staff monitors her condition.
"During that five-week stretch, my daughter got sad. My son got sad and acted out," she said. "They would stand in front of the door and not let my husband go to work. If I was leaving for treatment, they would try to keep me at home."
Nierengarten and her husband, Michael, say the support of their friends and family have gotten them through a challenging time.
"It's been tough for all of us because you never want to see loved ones go through this, especially at this point in our life, especially with little kids," he said.
"But as time has gone on and she's responded well to treatment, you feel like you're moving forward. We've had so much support and help from the community and both sets of family live nearby. Even though it's been an unfortunate situation, I think we're as situated as well as anyone could be."
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Munster woman fights aggressive leukemia - nwitimes.com