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Survey On Directed Family Cord Blood Banking for Transplantation Among the National Cord Blood Bank Network in Italy

Authors :
Alessandro Nanni Costa
Simonetta Pupella
Paola Bargamaschi
Alberto Bosi
Serena Urbani
Laura Salvaneschi
Mauro Pagliarino
Luigina Fazio
Letizia Lombardini
Paola Saracco
Giuliano Grazzini
Riccardo Saccardi
Anna Tamburini
Maria Screnci
Source :
Blood. 114:4195-4195
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2009.

Abstract

Abstract 4195 Directed family cord blood (DCB) storage provides hemopoietic stem cell source for transplantation (HSCT) for families with an existing or a potentially future recipient with HSCT curable disease (D). The National CB Banks Network in Italy (ITCBN) has a leading role in providing public DCB service for high-risk families, in compliance to GITMO directives for eligibility criteria (HSCT curable D: malignant MD, non MD, inherited ID). To provide best cost-effective practices recommendations it is important to report on DCB procedures and HSCT rate (HSCT-R) among public Banks. By 12.12.2008 almost 1800 DCB units were stored in 18 Italian Banks and 104 (9%) issued for HSCT. The present survey aims at summarizing the over 15 yrs DCB experience among 5 ITCBN Banks active since 1997 (range 1990-1997), and including 670 DCB units. Results Preliminary analysis reports a 94% overall compliance to eligibility criteria directives, and overall HSCT- R for an alive sibling of 12% (63/522); the 63 HSCT were 97% matched, for curing ID in 84% and with 72 % overall survival outcome. Different policies among Banks were compared (Bank vs others: 1) eligibility criteria distribution : Bank PV06 DCB for MD Conclusion. Advice for public long-term DCB storage should depend on HLA compatibility, potential recipient, disease progression, and likelihood/ timing of using DCB; Italian CB Banks are actively cohoperating to find best public banking practices to ensure a CDB storage system that is ethical, cost effective and responsive to patient needs. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
114
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7667ca83107b38958322f19fcdb8941e