St. Thomas child Lily Wag Seeks Urgent Live liver transplant Amid Overwhelming Donor Response
WORLD NEWS – CANADA: A St. Thomas family has been living at SickKids Hospital in Toronto as their 12-year-old daughter awaits a lifesaving liver transplant after doctors determined her liver can no longer sustain life. The family’s recent social media appeal for a donor went viral, producing an astonishing flood of potential donors that forced the transplant team to temporarily stop accepting new applications while they process candidates one at a time.
Medical teams say a living donor represents the best immediate chance for transplantation: a healthy person can donate a portion of their liver rather than the whole organ, and both donor and recipient livers can potentially regrow to original size within six to eight weeks. There remains the option of a deceased donor, which would provide a whole liver, but availability is unpredictable. Candidate evaluation is thorough and slow by design—each potential donor must undergo CT scans, MRIs, blood work and X-rays—so the backlog of applicants is creating a significant timeline pressure.
Clinicians are working to keep the girl as stable as possible, but stress that time is limited and her condition could deteriorate quickly. If a compatible live donor moves forward, the surgical procedure would likely be a lengthy operation measured in hours. Meanwhile, the family is staying together at the Ronald McDonald House to be near the child, about two and a half hours from home, allowing siblings to attend school nearby and parents to coordinate care. The household remains grateful for the community response but anxious about the narrow window in which a transplant must take place. The situation is now a race against the clock as medical teams screen offers and hope for a timely match.
Video originally published on 2026-01-27 19:13:21
