A man with a rare form of blood cancer has travelled 10,000 miles to meet the stranger who saved his life.
Luke Melling, 31, from Melbourne, Australia, says he was "staring death in the face" before receiving a stem-cell transplant from Alastair Hawken, of Grantham, Lincolnshire.
The match between the pair was so perfect that the men now believe they could be distantly related, as both their families hail from Preston, Lancashire – the town they chose for their emotional first meeting.
They are sharing their story to encourage more people to join the NHS Stem Cell Donor Registry.
Three years ago, Luke, who was then 28, was desperately ill in hospital with Hodgkin lymphoma.
He had been living with the condition since he was 16 and, despite being in remission four times, the cancer kept coming back.
After exhausting all other treatments, he was told he needed a transplant of stem cells – which can be found in the bone marrow and produce essential blood cells – to survive.
But no-one in his family, and no-one in Australia, was a match, so doctors started searching global stem-cell registries for a donor.
"It was pretty much like, 'This is it – this is the only option you have. It's either this or you're going to die'," Luke says.