Hanif Mouehla
As a boy living with sickle cell anemia, a genetic disease that causes red blood cells to break down, Hanif Mouehla of Pomona was always bracing for the worst: discomfort that would ratchet into episodes of intense pain.
In 2013, just after turning 8, Hanif complained of a backache; within a day, both of his lungs had collapsed. On a ventilator, fighting for his life, Hanif arrived at the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit of Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital. There, doctors induced a coma to speed recovery, then approached Hanif’s parents to discuss a clinical trial for which the hospital is a leading facility: a stem-cell transplant study that recruits family members as bone marrow donors to replace sickle hemoglobin red blood cells with healthy ones.
“For any person who has nearly lost a loved one,” Hanif’s mother, Khuraira Mouehla, says, “Finding out there is a potential solution is a gift from God. I knew whatever the doctors asked of us was something they truly believed in.”
Hanif’s twin brothers, then 11, weren’t compatible donors. Thankfully, though Khuraira was a half-match to her son, he was eligible to undergo treatment in a national trial conducted by Dr. Cairo, using selected stem cells from his mother while receiving a Haploidentical stem-cell transplant.
“They explained it might be uncomfortable,” Khuraira says, “but I always said: ‘Is it as bad as labor?’” She channeled that maternal strength into giving life, a second time, to Hanif. “Honestly, to me, the procedure was a walk in the park compared with what it could do for my son.”
On September 15, 2014, Khuraira watched in amazement as the technician drew blood and dashed out of the room to prepare the stem cells for Hanif – an influx that created a repair network for the boy to replenish healthy cells without limit.
While he will always have the sickle cell trait, the crisis that plagued him has disappeared, and he can live a complete, normal life. Now, Hanif is a healthy 12-year-old with strong basketball skills and straight As, living in Bergen County, NJ, with his family. He wants to become a doctor, just like the “real heroes with big hearts” who saved his life, he says.