Why is cord blood important for ethnic minorities?
There are differences in the
frequency of certain HLA types among ethnic groups. Therefore, patients
are more likely to find a good match among donors from their own ethnic
group.
African-American patients who need bone marrow transplantation
have an especially hard time finding an unrelated bone marrow donor.
There are three reasons for this difficulty. The first is simply
numerical. African-Americans make up only 12% of the U.S. population
and, thus, fewer potential donors are available. The second reason is
that there is much greater variation in HLA-types among people with
African ancestry than in any other group. And third, some people who
have both African and European or other ancestry may have novel
combinations of HLA types that are not found in either parental
population.
Epidemiological estimates
indicate that at least three times as many African-American volunteer
bone marrow donors than Caucasian donors would be needed for
African-American patients to have a chance that equals that of
Caucasian patients to find a match in the same bone marrow donor
registries. As a result, African-American patients are much less likely
to find a matched, unrelated bone marrow donor. With cord blood,
however, a partial match is acceptable and most African-American
patients can find a suitable cord blood unit. Large public cord blood
bank inventories, therefore, can help make up for the difficulty in
finding suitable bone marrow donors for minority patients.
African-American patients, like all other patient groups, may need
transplants for leukemia, lymphoma, and inherited diseases such as
severe combined immune deficiency (SCID or "boy-in-the-bubble"
syndrome). In addition, African-Americans are more likely than others
to suffer from sickle cell disease, a sometimes devastating and
crippling disease that eventually could be lethal for most patients. At
present, the only cure is a hematopoietic stem cell transplant. Early
results show that patients with sickle cell disease can benefit from
cord blood transplants, either from related, or from unrelated donors.
Sickle cell patients do better, however, if transplanted early in life.
They have a much better chance to survive after the transplant and
they are spared the devastating life-time effects of sickle cell
disease.
Note:
Unrelated hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is not suitable for
all Sickle Cell patients and may be used for certain patients with
severe Sickle Cell Disease.
The
New York Blood Center's National Cord Blood Program has provided cord
blood transplants for over 3,500 patients to date (more than 2,300 in
the U.S.) from a growing inventory that currently numbers over 50,000
cord blood units. Of U.S. patients transplanted, 54% have been
non-caucasian; 16% of those patients have been African-Americans and 20
of those patients had sickle cell disease. [Click here to read Keone Penn's story].
Patients from other ethnic minority
groups also have more difficulty finding a matching unrelated bone
marrow donor. Again the problem is numerical. Minority groups simply
have smaller numbers from which to draw potential donors. Many Hispanic
patients also have ancestors from more than one ethnic group and
people from different regions of Asia also tend to differ from
Caucasians in their HLA types. For this reason, cord blood banks
established in other parts of the world could benefit many U.S.
citizens. A Japanese-American, with four Japanese grandparents for
example, would have a much better chance of finding a suitable cord
blood unit through the Japanese National Cord Blood Program than from a
U.S. Cord Blood Bank.
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