1 / 22

Asma Sultan Alolama, MD

Private Cord Blood Banking Should it be allowed? Asma Sultan Alolama, M.D. Asma Sultan Alolama, MD. History: In 1974, Kundtzon found HC in CB In 1982, Nakahata found that CB contain more HC than BM In 1983, Toles proved that Hematopoietic progenitor cells were available in CB

alijah
Download Presentation

Asma Sultan Alolama, MD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Private Cord Blood Banking Should it be allowed? Asma Sultan Alolama, M.D Asma Sultan Alolama, MD

  2. History: • In 1974, Kundtzon found HC in CB • In 1982, Nakahata found that CB contain more HC than BM • In 1983, Toles proved that Hematopoietic progenitor cells were available in CB • In 1988, the First CB Stem Cell transplantation was done for a child with Fanconi’s Anemia • In 1992, Publo Rubinstein established First Public Cord Blood Bank, NY “National Cord Blood Program”

  3. What is UCB? • It’s the blood remaining in the Umbilical cord & placenta after cutting the UC; considered a waste

  4. At Birth After the delivery of the placenta Before the delivery of the placenta

  5. Both Methods are comparable in terms of : -total blood volume -CD 34 + count -Total Nucleated Cell count • The major issues in obtaining high quality units for transplantation are: -Maximizing the volume of blood collected -Avoiding microbial contamination -Avoiding undue delays that could result in clotting of the specimen

  6. Place 25 ml CB in quarantine overwrap & inser in canister Remove most of RBC/plasma & isolate SC into 20 ml autoxpress device & add 5 ml DMSO Insert unit into controlled rate freezing & initiated automatic controlled freezing Archive the unit into bio archive system

  7. Unrelated UCB is a useful alternative HSCT for patients without suitably matched & readily available related or unrelated stem cell donors. • Currently > 450,000 CB grafts are available in > 50 CB banks. • It has been estimated that > 20,000 UCB transplantation have been performed worldwide. • >2,000 CB transplants are done worldwide/yr

  8. CB Advantage: Disadvantage: • Rapid availability • Absence of risk for the donor • Decreased incidence of aGVHD • Less stringent HLA matching • Relatively low cell dose, particularly for adult & large size children • Unavailability of donor for later DLI if needed

  9. Types of CB banking: • Public • For family use: 1-when a sibling of the expected child has a disease than can be successfully treated with HSCT Or 2- The Parent of the expected child has a disease that can be successfully treated with HSCT & there are shred HLA-antigens between the parents • For private use, in case a need arise in the future

  10. A stored CB in a public bank is at least 100 times more likely to be released for transplantation than a unit that is privately stored. • The probability of using one’s own CB is very small, probably as low as 0.04% (1:2500) to 0.0005% (1:200,000) in the first 20 yrs of life • Yet the number of privately stored units exceeds those in public banks by > 3-folds & continues to grow. • Worldwide, there are approx 134 private banks

  11. Recommendation for HLA & Cell dose: • CB with 6/6 or 5/6 HLA match • Malignant disorders: • Nucleated cell dose: -at freezing, min 2.5-3.0 X 10 7/kg - at thawing, 2.0-2.5 X 10 7/kg • CD34+ cell dose: at freezing or at thawing aprox 1.2-1.7 X 10 5/kg • Non-Malignant disorders: Same

  12. CB unit with 4/6 HLA mismatch: • Malignant disorders: • Nucleated cell dose; -at freezing, min cell dose 3.5 X 10 7/kg - at thawing, min 3.0 X 10 7/kg • CD34 + cell dose; at freezing or after thawing, approx >1.7 X10 5/kg • Non-Malignant disorders: • Nucleated cell dose; at freezing, min cell dose of 4-5 X10 7/kg, at thawing, min 3.5 X10 7/kg • CD 34+ cell dose; at freezing or thawing; > 1.7 X10 5/kg

  13. Concerns regarding storage of CB for future Autologous use include: • Low probability of clinical need 1:2500- 1: 200,000 (0.04%-0.0005%) • Quality & Viability: The standards for public CB banking & private CB banking may differ in terms of maternal eligibility & nucleated cell count requirement & these factors may influence the oveall quality of the stored CB. • Latent Disease: the abnormal or diseased cells that cause the disease later in life may be present in the patient’s preserved CB • Lack of GVL effect

  14. Public donation of CB is recommended by: • ASBMT • American College of Obstetric & Gynecologists (ACOG) • American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

  15. Store it for Family use because the baby’s sibling has a disease that can be successfully treated by CB transplant or a parent (with shared Ag) has a disease that can be treated by CB transplant is Recommended by: • ASBMT • ACOG • AAP

  16. Store it for private use in the future in case a need arises is NOT recommended by: • ASBMT • ACOG • AAP

  17. Private CB banking is banned in • Italy • France • KSA • The European Union position states “the legitimacy of commercial CB banks for autologous use should be questioned as they sell a service that has presently no real use regarding therapeutic option”

  18. Why then the private CB banks are on the rise? • The reason for widespread private banking include: • Parental interest in giving their children “biological insurance” in case a disease develops in future yrs & can be treated by ASCT. • Aggressive marketing by banks offering private collection & storage of CB. • The economics of CB banking have enabled a rapid expansion of private banking.

  19. A public bank recovers costs only when the CB unit is shipped for transplantation, whereas a private bank receives immediate income when the CBU is collected & ongoing annual income for maintenance of the stored unit.

  20. Take home message: • Encourage parents to donate their cord blood for public use, • Recommend CB for family use only if a sibling or parent have a disease that can be treated with HSCT • Discourage parents from private banking: this requires public education to counteract the marketing of the private banks

  21. Work on accreditation from the start • Establish registry • Most importantly establish your Transplant unit before building your CB bank.

More Related