A could help save multiple people waiting for an organ donation, such as Marc Lemoine from Manitoba who has been awaiting a kidney transplant for more than two years.

When Lemoine was 21-years-old he was told his kidneys were failing due to an untreated strep throat infection that lead to a rare kidney condition.

He got a transplant from his mother but 20 years later, his body has started rejecting it.

He now is hooked up to a dialysis machine twice a day to remove unwanted waste from his blood.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e stuck to a machine 10 hours a day,鈥 Lemoine told CTV Winnipeg, adding that it鈥檚 taken a major toll on his life.

鈥淚 was really starting to feel it. I stopped working because I couldn鈥檛 travel anymore,鈥 he said.

His wife, Francine Lepage-Lemoine, decided to step up and get tested to see if she鈥檇 be a match.

Unfortunately she wasn鈥檛 a match for Lemoine, but a program put in place by Canadian Blood Services means her kidney can still be donated to stranger.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e considered across Canada to be part of a chain where I would give a kidney if someone were a match to Marc and gave their kidney to him,鈥 Lepage-Lemoine said.

The donor chain creates endless recipient-donor pairings and , more the 500 kidney transplants have been done through the program since 2009.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a gift of a normal life for everybody, for all of us,鈥 said Lemoine.

If everything works out, Lepage-Lemoine told CTV Winnipeg that she will be travelling to B.C. in the next few months to give her kidney to a stranger.

In the meantime, the couple is cautiously optimistic as they wait for Lemoine鈥檚 operation day.

With files from CTV Winnipeg鈥檚 Katherine Dow