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Public cord blood banking

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Breast Cancer-Resistance Protein (BCRP) In vitro ... Bone marrow can be used to treat patients of any size, one log more cells. ... HLA-A, -B, and -DR antigens ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Public cord blood banking


1
Public cord blood banking
Spring 2009
2
In 1988, the first umbilical cord blood
transplantation (CBT) was reported by Prof
Gluckman in a child with Fanconis anemia,using
cord blood (CB) from his HLA matched sister.
  • It tooks another 7 years until the first CBT was
    performed in an adult recipient.
  • To date nearly 14,000 of umbilical cord blood
    transplants have been performed worldwide in
    pediatric and adult patients.
  • more than 95 of patients who are in need for
    transplantation are able to find 46/6 matched
    unit in CB registries, according to NetCord or
    National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP) report.

3
  • source of stem cells
  • The stem cells used in most transplants today
    come from BM.
  • BM transplants have been performed successfully
    since 1969, nearly 20 years before the first
    successful cord blood transplant.Stem cells are
    also found in
  • Blood circulating in the body
  • Fat obtained during liposuction
  • Muscle
  • Bone
  • Skin
  • Blood Vessels
  • Brain
  • Gastrointestinal tract
  • Retina
  • Liver
  • Pancreas
  • Cornea
  • human embryos
  • fetal tissue
  • hair follicles

4
Characterization of Hematopoietic Stem Cell
  • Surface marker
  • CD34
  • CD 38
  • HLA-DR
  • c-Kit
  • Thy-1 (CD90)
  • Lin (Glycophorin, Trasferin receptor,CD33, CD15,
    CD20,CD3,CD45RA,CD41)
  • Dye exclusion
  • Rhodamine-123/low, Hoechst-33342/low
  • ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters
  • Multidrug Resistance P-glycoprotein (MDR1)
  • Breast Cancer-Resistance Protein (BCRP)
  • In vitro culture

5
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6
  • Advantages of bone marrow
  •  Producing new cells in about 18 days, one to two
    weeks faster than cord blood transplants.
  • Bone marrow can be used to treat patients of any
    size, one log more cells.
  • More than one unit of bone marrow can be
    collected from the same donor.
  • Advantages of Cord blood
  • Easily and rapidly available UCB unit averages 2
    weeks, compared with 2 months for BM.
  • Absence of risk for mother and newborn and its
    painless and no side effects.
  • Lower risk of GVHD (low number naïve repertoire
    of CB-derived T cells )
  • Lower risk of infection contamination
    particularly CMV
  • Preserved GVL effect (higher number unique
    property of NK cells in CB)
  • The comparison of the gene expression profiles of
    PB, BM,CB HSCs suggests the potential to
    differentiate into no hematopoietic lineages
  • CB HSCs express special TF not seen in HSCs from
    other sources, inhibit differentiation and
    higher proliferation

7
  • Cord blood banking
  • is a procedure in which the umbilical cord blood
    after birth is
  • Collected
  • Shipped
  • Processed
  • Frozen
  • Stored (in private or public banks) and
  • Release for future medical use.
  • Cord blood is enriched source of primitive
    stem/progenitor cells
  • The building blocks of the blood and immune
    system
  • Ability to differentiate into other tissues,
    organs, and blood vessels
  • To treat a host of diseases.
  • Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, after
    high-dose chemoradiotherapy

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9
  • CBU Collection
  • In collection bags containing 25ml of CPD
    anticoagulant in-utero and/or ex-utero methods.
    Products were stored hours prior to processing.
  • CBU Processing
  • Pre-processing cell count.
  • Hydroxyethylstarch (HES)-at 20 v/v.
  • Buffy coat fraction
  • Recover into collection bag
  • Cells in final product prior to cryopreservation
    for
  • Nucleated cell count (WBCNRBC)
  • Viability (PI)
  • Flow cytometry(CD45 dim CD34 enumeration)
  • CFU assay
  • Cells were plated in duplicate at concentration
    of 5 X 104/mL per plate using Methocult complete
    media. BFU-E, CFU-GM or CFU-GEMM colonies were
    enumerated after 14 days.

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11
Kinds of banking on cord blood Public cord blood
banks The first public banking on unrelated UCBB
was started in New York in 1993. About 225,000 CB
units frozen in 38 public cord banks in 25
countries.Donating is free. Private cord blood
banks The first private banking began 15 years
ago. For autologous or related allogeneic
transplantation, but this issue raises growing
scientific and ethical criticism.Donating isnt
free. Saved for a family member who has a
medical need For a biological sibling or parent
has a disease for directed donation. Used for
research studies by a laboratory or technology
company. To improve the transplant process for
future patients To new therapies using cord
blood. Based on the last Eurocord report out of
3,372 umbilical cord transplants in 19882007,
done in 43 countries at 373 transplant centers,
2965 were unrelated donors, 359 were related but
only three were autologous.
12
  • Public versus private
  • ? The individuals chances of using cord blood
    for hematopoietic disorders before 20 years is
    low from 1/20000 to 37/100000.
  • However, it is not clear how many of those 37
    peoples can use autologous sources.
  • ? There are alternatives to directed CBB for
    those who require transplantation through NetCord
    or NMDP
  • ? Own cells may be inappropriate in conditions
    where the disease has a genetic origin, such as
    some leukemia.
  • As a result, autologous commercial storage is
    unlawful in some European states.
  • In 2004, the European Group on Ethics in Science
    and New Technologies advised that
  • they sell a service, which has presently, no real
    use regarding therapeutic options.
  • Thus they promise more than they can deliver.
  • The activities of such banks raise serious
    ethical criticisms
  • The Group did not go recommending banning this
    activity but also recommended that
  • any kind of advertising made by commercial cord
    blood banks in the media, including on the
    Internet, must be adequately controlled by public
    authorities.

13
Why public banking is limited
  • The US private cord blood bank sales a cost of
    4070 for UCB collection and storage for 20
    years.In sensitivity analysis, if the cost of
    cord blood is lt201 or if needing a stem cell
    transplant is gt1/125, private cord blood banking
    becomes cost-effective.Private cord blood
    banking is only cost effective for families in
    which the children have a known diagnosis and
    needing a stem cell transplant
  • In order to accept donations for free, the bank
    must have income to support the laboratory.
  • That income may come from
  • 1-Federal support
  • 2-Profit margin of private banking
  • 3-Selling some of the donations to research
    programs
  • 4-Combination of the above

14
  • In Canada, the Fetal Medicine Committee of the
    Society of Obstetrician and Gynaecologists
    recommended that
  • establish registration, regulation and
    accreditation of CBB should be carefully
    regulated.
  • In the USA, on the recommendation of the
    Institute of Medicine of the National Academies,
    Congress voted US77 million for the
    establishment of a National Cord Blood Stem Cell
    Bank.
  • The RCOG strongly supports of a National CBB for
    allogeneic storage.
  • In early 2007, AAP, discourages families from
    thinking of private storage as "biological
    insurance,".
  • Instead,encourages private cord blood banking
    when a sibling in the family has a medical
    condition such as leukemia, lymphoma, aplastic
    anemia.

15
  • Although there are few organizations (FDA, NMDP,
    FAHCT/NetCord, AABB) work on quality of CB units
    registered for transplantation,
  • there are still few challenges between different
    banks on Processing, testing and freezing of
    successfully collected CB because of loss in
    initially harvested blood volume and cell dose.
  • To promote international standards for CBB
  • To provide unified access to high quality cord
    blood units from member banks.
  • NETCORD collaborated with FACT to establish the
    NETCORD-FACT Standards for Cord Blood Banks
  • Dr. Pablo Rubinstein, the NYBC's National Cord
    Blood Program Director president of NETCORD
    estimates that about 14,000 cord blood
    transplants have been performed worldwide.

16
Examples of organizations offering
accreditation, on an international level, related
to registry operations(APRIL 2008)
17
Informed Consent for Cord Blood Donors
  • In order to be a transplant donor, the mother
    must pass a blood test for the following
    infectious agents within 7 days of delivery
  • Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), type 1
  • Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), type 2
  • Hepatitus B virus
  • Hepatitus C virus
  • Human T-cell lymphotropic virus, type I
  • Human T-cell lymphotropic virus, type II
  • Treponema pallidum (Syphilis)
  • CytoMegaloVirus (CMV) (unless previously
    documented positive)
  • In order to be suitable for transplant, the cord
    blood collection must pass a blood test for
    contamination (by bacteria or spores in the
    delivery room) and is then typed for
  • ABO group and Rh type
  • HLA-A, -B, and -DR antigens
  • Hemoglobin electrophoresis in ethnic groups at
    high risk for hemoglobinopathies The above
    guidelines were published in 2003 by the
    International Society for Cellular Therapy
    (ISCT), based on a multi-organization
    collaboration, including
  • American Association of Blood Banks (AABB)
  • America's Blood Centers
  • American Red Cross (ARC)
  • American Society for Blood and Marrow
    Transplantation
  • Foundation for the Accreditation of Cellular
    Therapy (FACT)
  • National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP)

18
Summary of chronological aspects of the clinical
use of cord blood 1988- First Cord blood
transplant.1989-92-Clinical observation that
GvHD was reduced even in HLA incompatible
CBT. 1992-1993-Establishment of Cord Blood
Banks.(New York,Paris,Milan and
düsseldorf)  1993-1996-Feasibility of unrelated
mismatched CBT represent real alternative to
gold standard matched BMT.1995-Establishment
of Euro cord group program sponsored by European
Union.1997-Nucleated cell and CD34dose are more
important factor for engraftment and survival
(Eurocord group study).1998-Large series of UCBT
confirmation of the impact of cell dose and
HLA.1998-Foundation of the NETCORD organization
in order to control the quality of cord blood
units.2000-Retrospective comparisons between
UBMT and UCBT.2002-Use of cord blood cells in
adults with promising results.2003-Criteria of
cord blood choice and indications.2004-Use of
double CBT and reduced intensity conditioning in
adults.2004-Isolation of USSC from umbilical
cord blood.2004-Comparable results between
unrelated CBT and UBMT in adults.2005-Exvivo
expansion of UCB-derived Stem cells2006-co-transp
lantation of CB with limited no of HSC from
haploidentical sibling.2007-2008- Intra-bone
graft injection due to better SC homing,recovery
23-36 days
19
  • Our happy parents are always reminded to write in
    their babys book the following
  • Your first act of charity was to give life to
    someone else.

20
  • What diseases can be treated with cord blood?
  • More than 70 different diseases including
  • Leukemia
  • Immune deficiency
  • Sickle cell anemia
  • Aplastic anemia
  • Thalassemia
  • Lymphomas such as Hodgkin's disease and
    non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and similar diseases with
    genetic basis but lesser-known conditions.
  • Promising new research indicates to treat people
    with
  • Diabetes
  • Spinal-cord injuries
  • Heart failure
  • Stroke
  • Neurological disorders such as multiple
    sclerosis.
  • Most of these studies have been performed on
    animals, however, and the results are much more
    preliminary, say some experts, than the public
    has been led to believe.
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