-eng- Raising Funds For Chisa-s Treatment Uncen... Apr 2026
Mira doesn't tell her that they are waiting for a wire transfer. She doesn't tell her that they have started a GoFundMe, that her father has started a TikTok dancing for dollars, that the local church held a bake sale that raised exactly $847.
By The Family of Chisa | Special Report
We are asking for the global community to do what governments and insurance companies will not: to act without a filter. To fund the "Uncen." -ENG- Raising funds for Chisa-s treatment Uncen...
We do not have months. According to the latest PET scan, the inflammation is spreading toward Chisa’s respiratory center. She has approximately before she requires permanent ventilation.
After three months of misdiagnoses—doctors suggested everything from severe migraines to psychological stress—a lumbar puncture and a full genomic sequencing revealed the truth. Chisa’s own immune system is attacking her brain stem and spinal cord. The condition is so rare that it doesn’t even have a standard treatment protocol. Mira doesn't tell her that they are waiting
"The medicine is an angel," she explains, her voice a thin thread of sound.
[Insert Link to Official Fundraiser – GoFundMe, GiveSendGo, or Hospital Donation Portal] To fund the "Uncen
The word "Uncen" is terrifying. It means no insurance coverage. It means no government grants. It means that every vial, every hour of intensive care, every MRI to track the rogue cells must be paid for out of pocket.
"The 'uncensored' approach here is not pseudoscience. It is frontier science," Dr. Han explains during a video call from the ICU waiting room. "Chisa’s T-cells have become traitors. The CAR-T therapy will re-engineer her own immune cells into assassins that target the rogue B-cells. Then, the monoclonal antibody acts as a 'peacekeeper,' preventing future attacks. In an adult, this is aggressive. In a child, it is revolutionary. But we cannot move forward without the funds. The lab requires a 50% deposit just to culture her cells."
The family has tried everything within the public healthcare system: high-dose steroids, intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), and even six cycles of aggressive chemotherapy. Each treatment bought them a week of hope, followed by a devastating relapse.