My name is Alexandr Terzi. When an epileptic seizure in October 2024 changed everything, I was diagnosed with glioblastoma. Two brain surgeries, radiation, and chemotherapy followed — and for a while, it worked. Then in May 2026, scans showed the cancer had returned and was spreading. Along the way, I also survived a pulmonary embolism and blood clots in both legs.
Surgery is no longer an option. But a clinic in Germany offers dendritic cell therapy — training my immune system to reach what surgery and radiation couldn't. It represents something surgery no longer can: more time. The cost is €37,000. My family has already sold what we could and used our savings — which means what's left depends on others choosing to help close that gap.
I'm 39, with two daughters. What I'm asking for isn't abstract — it's the chance to watch them grow up.


