MAYWOOD, Il. - Donated umbilical cord blood contains stem cells that can save the lives of patients with leukemia, lymphoma and other blood cancers.
Now a study lead by a Loyola University Medical Center oncologist has found that growing cord blood stem cells in a laboratory before transplanting them into patients significantly improves survival.
The cell-expansion technology potentially could boost the number of patients who could benefit from life-saving transplants of stem cells derived from umbilical cord blood, said Patrick Stiff, MD, lead author of the study. Stiff, director of Loyola's Cardinal Bernardin Cancer Center, presented findings at the 2013 annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.
The ASH meeting is the preeminent annual event for physicians and scientists in hematology. Data from more than 5,300 abstracts were presented, and Stiff's abstract was selected as one of the 2013 meeting's top submissions.
Stem cell transplants can save lives of patients who have no other options. Patients receive high-dose chemotherapy, and in some cases, high-dose radiation as well. The treatment, unfortunately, kills healthy blood cells along with the cancerous cells. To rebuild the stores of healthy cells, the patient subsequently receives a transplant infusion of immature stem cells. Over time, these stem cells develop into new blood cells.
Stem cells are produced in the bone marrow. In many cases, patients receive bone marrow stem cells donated by family members or Good Samaritans who have signed up with a bone marrow registry.
But fewer than 50 percent of eligible patients can find a matching bone marrow donor. In such cases, stem cells derived from umbilical cord blood can be an effective alternative because these cells do not require perfect matches. (The cord blood is donated by parents of newborns, and frozen in a cord blood bank.)
A cord blood donation contains only about one ounce of blood, which usually is enough for only a child or very small adult. Many adults, therefore, receive a double dose of cord blood stem cells donated by two newborns.
The study examined a new technology called StemEx®, which grows cord blood stem cells in an outside laboratory. After 21 days, there's a roughly 14-fold increase in the number of stem cells available for transplant.
The study included 25 centers in the United States, Europe and Israel. Researchers used the StemEx technology for cord blood transplants in 101 leukemia and lymphoma patients. These patients were compared with a historical control group of 295 patients who each received a double dose of cord blood stem cells.
After 100 days, the overall survival was significantly higher in the StemEx group ( 84.2 percent) than in the control group (74.6 percent). The StemEx transplants also were quicker to engraft, i.e., develop into a sufficient number of blood cells. In the StemEx group, engraftment of neutrophil blood cells took a median of 21 days, compared with 28 days in the control group. Engraftment of platelets took a median of 54 days in the StremEx group and 105 days in the control group. (Neutrophils are infection-fighting white blood cells; platelets are small blood components that help the clotting process.) The faster neutrophils and platelets are engrafted, the less time patients are vulnerable to infections and bleeding.
The StemEx process has not been approved by the Food and Drug Administration, and is not available to patients except in clinical trials.
Loyola has treated more blood cancer patients with stem cell transplants than any other center in Illinois, and has one of the largest unrelated donor transplant programs in the world. Loyola physicians have performed more than 2,700 stem cell transplants, including about 150 cord blood transplants.
Loyola receives referrals from throughout the Midwest, including other academic medical centers in Chicago. Loyola was among the first centers to use umbilical cord donations for the treatment of certain adult cancers. Loyola has a particular expertise in treating patients who cannot find matching donors from either their families or the National Marrow Donor Program. Twenty years ago, only about 30 percent of patients could find matching stem cell donors. At Loyola, that percentage has increased to 95 percent, due to the use of cord blood transplants and other innovative techniques, Stiff said. Stiff is the Coleman Professor of Oncology in the Division of Hematology/Oncology at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.