Use of Cord Blood to Cure Leukemia
Use of Cord Blood to Cure Leukemia by Kerwin
A. Chang
A three-year-old leukemia victim was given a life-saving infusion
of her own cord blood, marking the first time a child with this
disease served as their own blood donor, American doctors said.
The little girl is now a thriving six-year-old -- a tribute, say
her doctors, to the pioneering transplant that helped her recover
from radical chemotherapy.
They also commended the foresight of her parents who decided to
save some of her umbilical cord on the off chance it might be
needed later.
"There's a good chance the procedure saved her life. She is in
remission and has an excellent chance of being cured," said Ammar
Hayani, the pediatric oncologist who treated the youngster at
Advocate Hope Children's Hospital in Oak Lawn, Ill.
In 2003, the little girl was diagnosed with the most common
childhood cancer, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and began long-term
chemotherapy treatment.
She quickly went into remission, but 10 months later the cancer was
back, and this time it had spread to her spine, a worrying
development that signaled the leukemia was a particularly
aggressive kind that would probably not respond well to treatment,
Hayani said.
Her doctors responded with a more aggressive chemotherapy protocol
and full-body radiation, and then looked around for ways to replace
the blood system they had wiped out.
Ordinarily they would have had to choose between a blood or bone
marrow transplant from a family member or unrelated donor, but in
this case, the family members were not a match.
And rather than use material from an unrelated donor, with the
corresponding risk of life-long complications, they opted to take
the controversial and risky step of transplanting the girl's own
cord blood, which had been frozen and stored at a private blood
bank several years following her birth in 1999.
"We were in unchartered territory," said Hayani. "We couldn't
predict with any certainty whether the operation would be
successful. We had no concrete data, but the parents felt very
comfortable with it, so we went ahead."
The procedure was not without risk, because even though the cord
blood was screened to ensure it did not contain any cancerous
cells, the screening techniques are not 100 percent accurate,
Hayani explained.
Still, the child's parents weighed the risks and gambled that their
daughter's own stem cells, contained in her cord blood, would
benefit her more than stem cells harvested from the bone marrow or
blood of strangers.
The results so far suggest they made the right call, said Hayani
who reported on the girl's case in a paper that appears in the
January issue of the journal Pediatrics.
"It's hard to argue with success. Relapse seems very unlikely at
this point, and she has an excellent quality of life, much better
than if she had taken stem cells from a donor."
Kerwin Chang writes for http://www.cordbloodmen.com where
you can find out more about cordbloodmen and other
topics.
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