Scientific News Health care Oncology UMBILICAL CORD BLOOD TRANSPLANT: EFFECTIVE NEW LEUKEMIA TREATMENT FOR ADULTS. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL STUDY SHOWS 26% OF PATIENTS SURVIVE DEADLY DISORDERS
Umbilical
cord blood transplant: effective new leukemia treatment for adults. New England
Journal study shows 26% of patients survive deadly disorders.
In the first published study of its kind,
researchers at the Ireland
Cancer Center at University Hospitals of Cleveland
and Case Western Reserve University have demonstrated the successful use of
umbilical cord blood in the treatment of adults suffering from life-threatening
forms of leukemia or aplastic anemia.
As detailed in the June 14th issue of The New
England Journal of Medicine, a team led by Mary J. Laughlin, MD, showed that the
transplantation of cord blood following high dose chemotherapy and radiation,
can save the lives of about one-third of adult patients for whom other
treatments are likely to fail.
“The patients we studied were unable to find a
suitable bone marrow match among family members or donors in the nationwide bone
marrow bank,” explains Dr. Laughlin, director of allogeneic transplantation at
University Hospitals Ireland Cancer Center and assistant professor of medicine
at CWRU. “We have shown that umbilical cord blood, which is rich in stem cells
necessary for a successful transplantation, is a viable alternative for these
patients, and the cord blood used does not have to be an exact match to be
effective.”
Umbilical cord blood is retrieved from the
placenta after the birth of a child. While normally the cord and placenta is
discarded after birth, the cord blood can be saved, frozen and stored. The stem
cells in the cord blood are immature blood-forming cells, a component of bone
marrow, capable of maturing into red blood cells, platelets, or
infection-fighting white blood cells. When transplanted into a cancer patient
whose own bone marrow has been depleted after chemotherapy or radiation
treatments, these stem cells provide the basis for a new healthy-blood forming
immune system.
“For years, we’ve been able to use cord blood
successfully to treat children with leukemia and other blood disorders. But
researchers have wondered whether the small amount of stem cells in cord blood
can create a whole new immune system in fully-grown adults, who are also more
likely than children to reject a less-than-perfect transplant,” says Dr.
Laughlin. “We’ve been able to show that just two ounces of blood harvested
from an umbilical cord can generate a new blood-producing immune system, and we
don’t even need a perfect match for a successful transplant because of the
immature nature of cord blood stem cells.”
Dr. Laughlin and her colleagues conducted a
retrospective study of 68 adults, ages 18 to 58, all of whom had received either
intensive chemotherapy or total-body radiation to deplete their bone marrow.
Following transplantation with cord blood, 90% of patients experienced the
growth of new, healthy blood cells. The incidence of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD)
was lower than expected, but still the cause of significant complications and
mortality in many patients. Of the 68 patients who underwent transplantation
with cord blood, 19 were alive (18 of those completely disease-free) at 40
months.
With support from The Leukemia & Lymphoma
Society, Dr. Laughlin is continuing to work with cord blood stem cells in the
laboratory, to grow them in vivo, hoping that a larger dose of stem cells used
in transplant will cause blood counts to recover faster and lower the risk of
infections. She is also trying to understand why umbilical cord blood is less
likely to be “rejected” by the recipient after transplantation.
The
Ireland Cancer Center at University Hospitals of Cleveland
and Case Western Reserve University is a Comprehensive Cancer Center designated
by the National Cancer Institute, the only NCI/CCC in northern Ohio. It is one
of few centers in the country actively using umbilical cord blood in the
transplantation of adults with blood disorders and cancers.
Contact: Eileen Korey; eileen.korey@uhhs.com;
216-844-3825; Source of the
information and the copyrights to the publication belong University
Hospitals of Cleveland.
Publishing date: June 19, 2001
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