Posted on 04/02/2005 2:13:45 PM PST by Founding Father
Scientists, Cord Blood Transplant Recipients Call on Senate to Pass S681 Establishing National Cord Blood Stem Cell Bank Network; Bill Would Create More Options for Critically Ill Patients
WASHINGTON, April 1 /U.S. Newswire/ -- New York Blood Center's (NYBC) President and CEO, Robert L. Jones, M.D., its National Cord Blood Program Director, Pablo Rubinstein, M.D., cord blood transplant recipients, will join Senator Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) -- a strong supporter of improving the options of patients who need transplants -- at a Senate Briefing on Monday, April 4 to urge passage of the Cord Blood Stem Cell Act of 2005 (S681).
The briefing will take place noon to 1 p.m. in the Russell Caucus Room (SR-325), Russell Senate Office Building (NW corner of Constitution and First), Washington, DC.
The bill was recently introduced by Senator Hatch and his co- sponsors Senators Sam Brownback (R-Kanas), Christopher Dodd (D- Conn.), Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) and Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), and has also received strong bi-partisan support in the House (HR 596). Passage of the bill would create a National Cord Blood Stem Cell Bank Network reflective of the ethnic diversity of our country, and allow up to 90 percent of patients to receive a well-matched unit.
According to Senator Hatch, "This bill will help establish an inventory of 150,000 ready-to-use, top quality cord blood units available to all patients in need of transplants to recover from lethal diseases."
Every year over 20,000 American children and adults who do not have a matched relative need treatment for a lethal disease that can only be cured with a marrow transplant. Many thousands are unable to be transplanted, in many cases because they cannot find a suitable volunteer donor ready to donate when needed among the several million volunteer donors in marrow registries. They must overcome lethal diseases like leukemia and lymphoma, certain genetic metabolic diseases and inherited diseases of the blood and immune system.
Cord blood stem cells, obtained from the placenta and umbilical cord of just-born babies, have been successfully used to treat such diseases. Cord blood, donated by the mother, is a non-controversial source of stem cells, which-unlike bone marrow- can be collected without risk of any kind to donors and stored frozen, in fully usable conditions, for many years. The great advantage of cord blood transplantation is that it does not require as exacting a tissue type match as donated bone marrow does. Thus, patients with uncommon tissue types, as is the case of many ethnic minority individuals, can find appropriate matches. Obviously, however, recipients of better-matched grafts do better and this is the purpose of this bill: a larger cord blood inventory means better matches and better transplant survival.
"Today marks a new beginning in our unending quest to save lives," said Dr. Jones. "The introduction of this bill calls on legislators to recognize that patients in need of a bone marrow transplant do not have to die waiting for a match. There is another option: cord blood."
Recent reports in the New England Journal of Medicine (Nov. 25, 2004 - Vol.351, No. 22) -- one of which focused on the outcomes of National Cord Blood Program stem cell graft recipients - showed that stem cells derived from umbilical cord blood are an effective transplant option for adult patients with leukemia or myelodysplasia. Cord blood is already a well accepted source of hematopoietic (blood forming) stem cell transplants for children (half of the US children who get a transplant to treat leukemia and certain genetic diseases are now being transplanted with cord blood from unrelated donors).
"We are grateful to Senator Hatch for his leadership on this important bill, and co-sponsors for their unselfish effort to help save lives," said Dr. Rubinstein. "No patient in need should have to go without a transplant. And by passing this bill, our country will take a giant leap in fulfilling that goal."
According to the GAO Report of October 2002, only a small subset of the patients actively seeking transplants each year actually succeed in finding a donor and the statistics are even worse for ethnic minorities, especially African-Americans. In a cruel example, sickle cell disease, a relatively frequent genetic disease curable by transplantation, mostly affects people of African descent who have lower probability of finding matched bone marrow donors.
Providing physical examples of the life-saving power and potential of cord blood transplants will be cord blood recipients Keone Penn, the first patient to be cured of sickle cell disease with a cord blood transplant from an unrelated donor; and Stephen Sprague, one of the first adults treated with cord blood for leukemia, who will tell their stories and discuss the patient perspective of transplants.
The bill would authorize $15 million in federal funds during Fiscal Year 2006 and such sums as needed in FY 2007 to FY 2010. The funds will subsidize the collection, processing, testing, freezing and storing of cord blood units that would then be made available for transplantation treatments.
The National Cord Blood Program (NCBP) of New York Blood Center is a pioneer in the banking of cord blood for use in clinical transplantation. Since the Program's inception in 1992, it has provided cord blood for 1,700 patients of all ages and ethnic backgrounds in the United States and 27 other countries, and received and processed more than 27,000 cord blood donations.
New York Blood Center (NYBC), one of the nation's largest community blood organizations has been providing blood, transfusion products and services to patients in New York and New Jersey hospitals since 1964. The New York Blood Center is also home to the Lindsley F. Kimball Research Institute and the National Cord Blood Program, the nation's largest public cord blood bank. New York Blood Center operates a Clinical Services division as well as a Hemophilia Services division in collaboration with the Hemophilia Consortium - providing critical drugs and blood products delivered to the homes of area hemophilia patients. New York Blood Center is not affiliated with the American Red Cross.
For more information, the public can visit the National Cord Blood Program's informational website at http://www.nationalcordbloodprogram.org.
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: PHOTO(S) AVAILABLE: High resolution, publication-ready photos supporting this story will be available following this event for free editorial use at: http://www.wirepix.com/newsphotos
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Bill Summary and Status
S-681
Title: A bill to amend the Public Health Service Act to establish a National Cord Blood Stem Cell Bank Network to prepare, store, and distribute human umbilical cord blood stem cells for the treatment of patients and to support peer-reviewed research using such cells.
Sponsor: Sen. Hatch, Orrin G (UT) (introduced 3/17/2005) Cosponsors (4)
Latest Major Action: 3/17/05 Referred to Senate committee. Status: Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
COSPONSORS (4), ALPHABETICAL
Sen Brownback, Sam (KS) - 3/17/2005
Sen Dodd, Christopher J, (CT) - 3/17/2005
Sen Harkin, Tom (IA) - 3/17/2005
Sen Specter, Arlen (PA) - 3/17/2005
Anyone here going to have a child soon? Make sure you obtain the UC fluids and have them frozen. The odds are you will never need them but if you do, say of the child gets cancer, it might save them or keep them alive longer.
If the government will pay for the storage on the remainder I would be willing to donate some of my kids' samples for the bank.
More than likely this cord bank would be for the public good and on an available basis, I don't think the bank will be used for specific individuals to store cords for future use if they get sick. Like stem cells used for bone marrow transplants, a match would have to be made.
Awesome!! It is my hope that more research will be done on Cord Blood Stem cells, to prove their efficacy compared to Embryonic Stem Cells.
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