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This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more Carole, Lesley and Susan have always have a close bond - but now it's extra special (Image: Lesley Maston) Sisters tend to have a close bond, but for Lesley Maston the ties are stronger than most because without the help of both her siblings, she might not have been alive today. “We’ve always been very close, but I never let them forget how grateful I am – it’s thanks to them that I’m still here,” says Lesley of her younger sisters Carole and Susan, who both contributed to saving her life.

“Both of them were desperate to help when I needed them most, which was amazing.” Her sisters first came to her aid back in October 2003 when Lesley, now 60, was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia , a rare type of blood cancer which starts in the white blood cells in the bone marrow. “The first sign anything was wrong was a huge bruise appearing on the top of my leg, way out of proportion to its cause,” recalls Lesley, who lives inSt Helens, Merseyside, close to her sisters.



“For a few weeks I’d been feeling extremely tired, breathless and started having severe headaches.” function loadOvpScript(){let el=document.createElement('script');el.

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