Faces Of Research

Sometimes when you're sick, all you need is rest to feel better. But other times, the issue is more complicated. Those are the moments that health care backed by cutting edge research comes to the rescue.

The Faces of Research series captures the stories of Duke Health patients who battled complex health challenges. These North Carolinians are now able to live life to the fullest thanks to the combined work of researchers and clinicians pushing the boundaries of what is possible in modern health care.

Akenji and Asanti Dingaoyo

What has research given me?

"It has given me a life with my boys. It made a lot of things possible. Now we get to see our boys grow up and see what they become. We're so thankful for that."

- Janae Dingaoyo

Hear Janae explain how Duke University Hospital saved her children.

Janae Dingaoyo's twin boys weighed barely a pound each when they were born at just 23 weeks - tiny, fragile and struggling to breathe.

But Janae and her husband, Jon, had a formidable advocate: the Duke Children's Neonatal Intensive Care Unit .

Akenji was born first, one pound, four ounces; Asanti followed two minutes later and three ounces heavier. They would spend about six months in that NICU, a journey marked by progress and potholes alike. At two months, Asanti needed a delicate, non-invasive surgical procedure to close a hole in his heart. Later, both were successfully treated for a problematic eye disease.

Through it all, the team of nurses kept the Dingaoyos hopeful.

"They treated our babies like they were their babies," Janae said. "They gave us the motivation and confidence that we could do it."

Now pushing 2 years old, the boys are thriving. Akenji is giggly and energetic with a mischievous grin. Asanti is more calm; he loves to cuddle and be tickled.

And like most siblings, they get along. Sometimes.

"I'll catch a small moment when they're playing with a toy together or are chasing themselves up the hallway and it's the cutest thing ever," Janae said.

Sabrina Lewandowski

What has research given me?

"I fought to keep my body alive and from my body I was able to create another human being. "

Sabrina reflects on her cancer journey and the options Duke opened up for her.

At just 30 years old, Sabrina Lewandowski woke up with a severe headache caused by an aggressive brain cancer that should have killed her. Instead of sending her home without options, physicians at the Preston Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center at Duke offered her a plan - and hope .

Under the care of neuro-oncologist Dr. Henry Friedman, Lewandowski received an experimental treatment that rotated different chemotherapy drugs instead of relying on one. This approach aimed to outsmart her fast-growing tumor. More than a year of this chemotherapy, combined with radiation, extended her life well beyond expectations.

Now, 23 years later, Lewandowski is alive and well, living in Raleigh with her husband and daughter. Her experience opened her eyes to the critical role of medical research, and she now volunteers with Angels Among Us , a fundraiser supporting brain tumor research at Duke. And she takes nothing for granted.

"I'm very blessed every day but I don't want to think like I beat it, because I don't know that I did," she said. "But having a baby, getting married, being able to work, I'm very blessed and every day I appreciate it. Every single day."

Yvette Crawley

What has research given me?

"It means every day is open for me and my vision doesn't hold me back."

Yvette explains how decades of research at Duke saved her vision and her retirement plans.

For the first few years, retirement was everything Yvette Crawley had envisioned. But then, the world started going dark.

She was diagnosed with macular telangiectasia type 2, or MacTel, a retinal disorder that causes slow vision deterioration. Crawley, who loves to hit the road camping with Triela, her Bichon/Yorkie mix, felt the walls closing in. She feared a future where she wouldn't be able to drive, explore and live fully.

There was no treatment until the FDA approved a new therapy in March 2025 after clinical trials that included Duke. Soon after, a Duke Eye Center team implanted a capsule about the size of a grain of rice into her eye that significantly slowed the degeneration . Crawley's procedure was the first of its kind at an academic medical center, and the first in the state and region. And it changed her life.

"The ability to pivot, to make choices, to continue to grow regardless of what my age is - I do not want limitations," she said. "I don't want to not be able to go to exercise class or church or bible study because I can't drive my car. This empowers me to make whatever choices I want in my retirement."

Creed Kolasa

What has research given me?

"Independence. Without my medicine I might not be able to walk or use my hands still. The medicine helps keep my muscles strong to keep me going."

Listen to Creed's mother recall how she found Duke Children's Hospital where they were able to treat his disease and he was able to continue living and growing.

Creed Kolasa was just six months old when diagnosed with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), an aggressive disease that leaves most children unable to walk by about age 12. Doctors offered Creed little hope.

"They told me to just take him home and love him," said Creed's mother, Jessica. "They had no solutions."

But Duke did. People with DMD have low amounts of a protein that holds muscle together in the body. Sometimes, they have none. A new treatment being developed promised to try and restore this protein. Creed joined a clinical trial and has thrived under the care of his team at Duke Children's Hospital .

Creed is 13 now and doing great. He walks on his own, goes to school, plays video games and loves to travel. He still receives the weekly drug infusions that have changed his life. The Kolasa family - Creed's parents, three siblings and dog Ranger - live in Fayetteville but often make the roughly two-hour drive north to Durham. Sometimes it's for treatment; other times it's to cheer on Duke football, which Creed became a part of as an honorary member.

"He's very witty and funny," Jessica Kolasa said. "He can light up a room. And he loves to talk smack about his sports teams."

The Duke Football team hoists Creed into the air above the huddle while some hold up 1 finger

Alfonzo Grafton

"People need to understand that if it's something that can be cured, something that you can keep a person going, man, y'all have to keep this funding going."

Alfonzo reflects on getting access to an NIH trial at Duke that saved his life.

The chemo wasn't working on Alfonzo Grafton's lung cancer. He was fading.

It took a Duke Cancer Institute clinical trial funded by the National Institutes of Health to turn things around . The medication targeted a protein that put the brakes on his body's ability to fight the tumor.

He was the first of 60 patients to receive the drug, and boy, did it work. Grafton's body reacted so positively to the medication that his doctor called him a "super responder."

"I felt like I was living again," said Grafton, a Durham native thankful to be able to keep spending time with his family. "I had my life back."

Bianca Harvey

What has research given me?

"Research has given me hope and options."

Bianca Harvey tells the story of her Instagram video about her cancer that went viral and how research saved her life.

The tumor in her colon hurt so much Bianca Harvey felt like she was being stabbed in the stomach.

A 34-year-old teacher, she went to the hospital after a colleague found her literally doubled over in pain in her sixth-grade classroom. The Fayetteville native, a former college track athlete, bodybuilder and kickboxer, had stage IV cancer.

But Duke oncologist Nicholas DeVito had a plan. Bianca began a clinical trial with chemotherapy - which she received at Duke every other Thursday for 18 months. When that was no longer effective, she shifted to immunotherapy.

One day she stood in a Duke clinic bathroom and did a quick song and dance for TikTok, a cheerful moment during a challenging journey. It caught fire on social media, and the largely positive feedback prompted more posts . She now has dozens of updates illuminating her cancer experience.

"You can keep it to yourself, or you can speak about it to the world and maybe help someone else," she said.

Her story keeps getting better: Her most recent scans came back completely clear of cancer. But her storytelling won't end, she promises.

"I'm definitely going to keep dancing," she said. "I want people to know they're not alone in the battle."

Stories of health care wins like these would not be possible without decades of research. Treatments that change people's lives every day begin as ideas and experiments in labs - not just at Duke but all around the country.

Much of this work is funded, directly and indirectly, by the federal government. Grants from the National Institutes of Health and other agencies support crucial basic and applied research that benefits not only individual patients but society overall.

With continued support of research, what other health challenges can we solve? How many more lives can we save?

Learn more at: researchsaveslives.duke.edu

A graphic reads Duke Research Saves Lives
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