He Cured His Own Disease

A medical student battling a deadly disorder finally got a lifeline—from his own research.

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A medical student battling a deadly disorder finally got a lifeline—from his own research.

It was just after Christmas 2013, and David Fajgenbaum was hovering a hair above death. He lay in a hospital bed at the University of Arkansas, his blood platelet count so low that even a slight bump to his body could trigger a lethal brain bleed. A doctor told him to write his living will on a piece of paper.

David was rushed to a CT scan. Tears streamed down his face and fell on his hospital gown. He thought about the first patient who’d died under his care in medical school and how her brain had bled in a similar way from a stroke. He didn’t believe he’d survive the scan. But he did.

David was battling Castleman disease, a rare autoimmune dis­order involving immune cells attacking vital organs. It wasn’t the first time a relapse had threatened his life. Massive ‘shock and awe’ chemotherapy regimens had helped him narrowly escape death during four previous attacks, but each new assault on his body weakened him.

“You learn a lot by almost dying,” he says. He learnt enough to surprise his doctors by coming up with a way to treat his disease. Six years later, he’s in remission, he and his wife have a baby girl, and he’s devoting his medical career to saving other patients like him.

As a boy in Raleigh, North Carolina, David spent Saturdays watching the North Carolina State Wolfpack football team with his dad, the team’s doctor. At age seven, he was obsessed with becoming a Division-I athlete. In middle school, he would wake up at 5 a.m. to go running. The walls of his bedroom were covered with football play charts.

He achieved his dream, making the Georgetown University football team as a quarterback. But in 2004, during his sophomore year, his mother died of a brain tumour. His obsessive focus deepened, helping him learn to appreciate life’s precious moments and understand that bad things happen to good people. “I know people far more worthy o...

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