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Double cord-blood transplant helps cancer patients. (Biomedicine).


For patients with blood diseases who need a stem cell stem cell

In living organisms, an undifferentiated cell that can produce other cells that eventually make up specialized tissues and organs. There are two major types of stem cells, embryonic and adult.
 transplant, doctors often turn to umbilical cord blood umbilical cord blood Transplantation A source of primitive and stem cells that can be used to reconstitute BM destroyed by aplastic anemia or by RT or chemotherapy for CA, lymphoproliferative malignancies. See Bone marrow transplantation, Stem cell therapy. . But the small supply of blood in each cord is often inadequate to meet the needs of an adult patient (SN: 10/26/02, p. 261).

To up the stem cell dose in each transplant, researchers gave 32 adults with lethal blood cancers stem cell transplants from two cord-blood donors. Double cord-blood transplants have rarely been used because of fears that immune cells from two donors might attack each other and derail de·rail  
intr. & tr.v. de·railed, de·rail·ing, de·rails
1. To run or cause to run off the rails.

2.
 the treatment.

In all but three of the cases receiving double transplants, however, the stem cells successfully grafted into the patient's bone marrow, says Juliet N. Barker of the University of Minnesota (body, education) University of Minnesota - The home of Gopher.

http://umn.edu/.

Address: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
, Twin Cities.

In all the engrafted transplants, cells from one of the cords completely displaced the other within 100 days, Barker reported last month in Philadelphia at a meeting of the American Society of Hematology. The "winning" cord blood wasn't necessarily the closest match with the patient's blood and wasn't always the larger of the two transplants, she notes.

Barker doesn't know why one transplant wins out over the other, but the mere presence of the losing transplant seems to facilitate engraftment engraftment /en·graft·ment/ (en-graft´ment) incorporation of grafted tissue into the body of the host.
Engraftment
The process of transplanted stem cells reproducing new cells.
 of the winner, she says. Although all of the patients in the study were extremely ill, 12 are still alive.--N.S.
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 4, 2003
Words:226
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