Canadian Blood Services reducing reliance on U.S. for life-changing plasma drugs
TORONTO — For years, Stéphane Cliche was a healthy avid athlete, but he kept getting sinus and respiratory infections and doctors couldn’t figure out why.
It wasn’t until he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2016 that it became clear his immune system didn’t work properly.
Cliche got immunoglobulin — a cocktail of antibodies from donor blood plasma — as a standard treatment taken alongside chemotherapy, which often knocks down patients’ immune systems.
Months after he stopped both the chemo and the immunoglobulin infusions, his health-care team did a followup blood test and found he had very few of his own antibodies — and would need to continue regular immunoglobulin injections to function as his immune system.



