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The National Institutes of Health estimate that one in 200 Americans will undergo a stem cell transplant in their lifetime. Only 30 percent of patients will find a matching donor within their families, with 70 percent seeking for unrelated matching donors in the bone marrow registry. 

A diagnosis of a life-threatening disease such as leukemia or lymphoma can be emotionally devastating. Often patients and their loved ones don’t know what to do first or where to turn for help. The resources presented here are intended to provide information on first steps for newly diagnosed patients whose healthcare professionals advise them that they will need a bone marrow or blood stem cell transplant.

Becoming well-informed makes it easier to take charge and advocate for yourself or a loved one.

What is a transplant?

A transplant is an infusion of healthy blood stem cells into the body to replace the ones producing the disease. Transplants can be autologous (aw-TAWL-uh-gus) meaning cells come from the patients themselves, or allogeneic (AL-oh-jen-EE-ik) meaning cells donated by another person. The type of cells used are blood stem cells, the immature cells that can grow into all types of blood cells. These stem cells may be found in three places:

  • Within the bone marrow – a soft tissue found inside some of the bones, including large amounts in the bone of the hip and thigh – that creates stem cells and blood cells
  • Circulating in small numbers within the blood itself
  • In cord blood, the blood found inside the umbilical cord after a baby’s birth

The transplant collects these stem cells and infuses them into the recipient, where they migrate on their own into the bone marrow and begin the work of creating new blood cells and immune system.

A young mother who is bald from chemotherapy is sitting in a kitchen holding her daughter. Both are smiling and looking out the window. Stem cell and bone marrow transplants can help people batting nearly 70 diseases, including blood cancer.

What conditions are helped by transplantation? 

Every three minutes, someone is diagnosed with a form of blood cancer like leukemia, lymphoma or myeloma. Additionally, others are diagnosed with blood disorders such as sickle cell anemia, or inherited immune disorders. For many, the only hope of a cure is a bone marrow, peripheral blood stem cell, or umbilical cord blood transplant. The diagnosis and treatment can seem overwhelming, but hope for recovery exists. 
 
Conditions that can be treated by transplant include:

  • Bone marrow diseases: Amegakaryocytosis/congenital thrombocytopenia, Fanconi anemia, Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), Pure red cell aplasia, Severe aplastic anemia. In these diseases the bone marrow does not function properly.
  • Histiocytic disorders: Includes Familial Erythrophagocythic Lymphohistiocytosis and others 
  • Hemoglobinopathies: Beta Thalassemia Major and Sickle Cell Disease. In these diseases the red blood cells do not function properly.
  • Inherited Immune System disorders: Severe combined immunodeficiency and Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome.
  • Inherited Metabolic disorders: Adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD), Hurler Syndrome (MPS-IH), Krabbe Disease (GLD), and Metachromatic Leukodystrophy (MLD).
  • Leukemias and lymphomas: Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL), Acute Myelogenous Leukemia (AML), Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL), Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML), Hodgkin’s (HL) and Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (NHL), and Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia.
  • Myelodysplastic syndromes: Including Myeloproliferative Disorders.
  • Multiple Myeloma and Plasma Cell disorders.
  • Other cancers and malignant diseases.
A young woman is facing away from the camera and talking to a doctor, who has a serious expression on his face.

What are the first steps after diagnosis? 

If you are diagnosed with a condition that is treatable with a transplant, you should schedule a consultation with a transplant center as soon as possible. Your physician will explain your treatment options and recommend the most appropriate type of transplant for you. If time permits, many patients seek out a second opinion about treatment. 

Selecting a hospital

When possible, patients are encouraged to obtain more than one opinion before choosing a hospital for treatment. Larger centers have cancer research programs in clinical, basic science, and prevention (population-based investigations) that are designated as comprehensive cancer centers by the National Cancer Institute. This ensures a strong body of interactive research leading to advances in patient treatments.

Patients have many different reasons for choosing specific transplant centers. The major considerations include:

  • Physician and Personal Referrals   
  • Geographic Constraints
  • Family Limitations
  • Insurance Coverage/Financial Constraints
  • Disease-Specific Specialization
  • Personal Preference
  • Professional Reputation 

Finding a Match

The first step in finding a matching donor is to determine the patient’s tissue type, so that the search can be started. This means a prompt visit to a transplant center, plus starting the tissue typing search among blood relatives, in case one of them is a match. Starting an unrelated donor search in the public registries right away can also save time, and can be done by Gift of Life or by a transplant center. 

What are HLAs and what is tissue typing? 

The important factor in tissue type is the Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA), which is a complex of genes in every person’s DNA that regulates the immune system. They are also responsible for whether a transplant is accepted or rejected by the body, so a good match is crucial. Tissue typing is the laboratory process where a tissue sample collected from inside the patient’s cheek on a cotton swab (or via a blood draw) is analyzed to determine the HLA types. Ten HLA factors are determined, and once the HLAs for a patient are known, the search for a matching donor can be started.

A Hispanic brother and sister in their late 20s are smiling and looking into the camera.

Family Members as Potential Donors

Since HLA are a genetic factor inherited from parents, it is logical to turn first to family members and test for a match. However, because the genes we inherit are a combination from our parents, only 30 percent of those seeking a transplant match find a donor within their own family. Those who don’t find a match within the family (70 percent of patients do not find one) can search the worldwide marrow donor registries to find a match. 

Searching the worldwide registry including Gift of Life Marrow Registry

The worldwide registries, including Gift of Life Marrow Registry, are made up of volunteer donors who offer to become bone marrow or blood stem cell donors in the event they are determined to be an HLA match with the recipient.  Searches are done through a central database called Bone Marrow Donors Worldwide, which links to registries around the world that hold the tissue type information of over 40 million volunteer donors. That sounds like a large number, yet the world population is 8 billion, so volunteer donors comprise 0.5 percent of the world population, one-half of one percent. 

Finding a Perfect Match

Perfect matches can be found in the registry, even though the donor and recipient are not siblings. When two people share an ethnic background, there is a higher chance that their HLAs will match up and the donation can take place. 

A group of six diverse adults crowds together to take a "selfie".  Gift of Life was founded to help address the lack of registry diversity, and remains committed to diversifying the pool of stem cell and bone marrow donors so that every patient in need can find a match.

The importance of diversity in the registry

Ethnicity and ancestry play a big role in the ability to find a match – some ethnic groups are underrepresented in the registries, making it difficult for some people in need to find their match. Building the diversity of the registries is a mission of Gift of Life – adding diversity to the registry will result in more life-saving matches for those in dire need. 

What is a haploidentical transplant? 

A haploidentical match is a half-match, for example, a biological parent is a half-match for each of their children because very child inherits half of their HLA profile from the mother and half from the father. Although half-matched transplants are rare, new advances in medicine have made the process possible for some patients under certain conditions. 

What is an umbilical cord blood transplant?

Cord blood is simply collected after a baby’s birth. It is packaged and shipped to a repository where it is tested and processed, then frozen in liquid nitrogen. If a patient’s tissue type matches that of a cord blood unit, it is sent to the patient’s hospital for a transplant. Because cord blood stem cells are immature, a perfect match is not necessary. 

What if no match is found in the registry?

If no match is found in the worldwide registry, that doesn’t mean no match exists, but that no one who is a match has yet registered as a donor. The family and friends of a patient can start a donor recruitment drive to try and find a match among the new donors they sign up.

 

Donor Search

Gift of Life Marrow Registry offers services to help patients’ families begin their donor search as soon as they learn a donor is needed; it is not necessary to wait until for the patient to enter the transplant center for the search to begin. 

By starting the process as soon as the decision for a bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cell transplant is made, a patient and their family can be fully prepared and ready for the donor search. The faster that search can be done, the better the patient outcome. 
 

A smiling female doctor is shaking hands across a table with a young man. Both of them are seated.  Learning that you have a matching donor available is an incredible moment of hope. Gift of Life is dedicated to making more of these moments happen for those battling life-threatening diseases.

Gift of Life supports patients

When a patient arrives at the transplant center prepared with tissue typing information, and a family study and preliminary unrelated donor search already completed, the transplant center saves valuable time and be able to take action more quickly. 

Gift of Life’s patient services include:

  • Education in Donor Search and Transplant Processes: We help educate patient and their families about the complex process of conducting donor searches, finding matches and the donation process.
  • Immediate and Extended Family Study: We offer immediate testing of family members to determine if any are a related match. Thirty percent of patients have a matching potential donor within the family.
  • Preliminary Unrelated Donor Search: A preliminary search of the worldwide database helps build a snapshot of any potential matches that are already in one of the registries around the world.  
  • Typing of Donor Matches: We facilitate pre-emptive extended testing of donors when possible matches are found in Gift of Life’s registry. If Gift of Life has a potential match, we will invite them for extended testing right away to determine how close the match is. 
  • Targeted Unrelated Donor Recruitment: When no other match exists, we use tissue type and ethnicity to guide the public campaign for recruiting new donors. As tissue type is inherited, the best possibility of finding a match lies with a donor from the same ethnicity.


 

Transplant timing matters

Being fully prepared can help ensure the timing of the transplant can happen at an appropriate time during the disease process, it allows patients to move quickly to transplant before the disease progresses or complications interfere, and allows adequate time for an unrelated umbilical cord blood search if necessary. 

We believe that all patients have a donor, and we want to partner with you to find that donor as quickly as possible. 

 

A Black couple in their thirties are sitting together on a couch and looking at a laptop computer. Both are smiling.

What can you do to start your donor search with Gift of Life?

1. Share key patient information with Gift of Life as soon as possible 

  • Names of patient, family members and family representatives, and who will be the main contact
  • Provide photos of the patient and sign a photo consent form so we can share their story publicly
  • Provide information about diagnosis, condition, health history, to help tell the story.
  • Provide personal information about the patient, age, activities, hobbies, membership in organizations, anything that will help make their story gain public attention.
  • Provide background on ethnicity and ancestry of family. This is key to helping find the most qualified potential donors. 

 
2.   Set up Donor Drives in your community

  • Your Gift of Life contact will help you set up donor recruitment drives in your community. We will provide all the supplies you need and will help you promote your event by creating flyers.
  • If you are agreeable, we will also seek out media coverage for the patient and the drives, which could possibly include articles in local newspapers, television coverage, and other publicity. There is no guarantee any media outlet will pick up your story, but we’ll do our best! 

3.   Create a Gift of Life Donor Circle as a home for your search effort

  • See below for more information and to create your very own Donor Circle.

We want every patient to find a matching donor and receive a lifesaving transplant. Please contact Chief Strategy and Operations Officer Marti Freund, mfreund@giftoflife.org, to get started.   

Donor Search Using Donor Circles

Gift of Life provides support for patients and their families in organizing, publicizing and running donor drives, including the online tool called Donor Circles, a way to create a central hub for a recruitment drive, with tools for live tracking of results, including matches and transplants that come from among a circle’s sponsored donors.

Donor Circles offer you a way to personalize a group of donors in the Gift of Life marrow registry through your own team page. You can give the gift of test kits to your friends and family, send out e-mail broadcast invitations, blog about your journey, and more!

  • Gift of Life’s Donor Circles are an online focal point for your search. Your Donor Circle has a dedicated page on our website that can be shared publicly, and will track your donor search in detail, from number of new donors who swab to financial contributions your search receives, all updated in real time. 
  • Your Gift of Life contact will help you set up your circle using the information collected above. We will also need a name for the donor circle, such as “#Hope4George” or “#MarthaStrong”. A hashtag is useful for promoting the search in social media on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. 
  • Once your Donor Circle is live, you can share it on Twitter and Facebook directly from the page itself, or the web address can be copied and added to emails or posted on any website.