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If you need more information, please contact one of the individuals below in Marketing/Public Relations at Nationwide Children's Hospital:
(614) 355-0495
(614) 355-0495
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COLUMBUS, OH, December 01, 2006 —
Two-thirds of the patients who receive bone marrow transplants (BMT) at
Columbus Children’s Hospital are treated for cancer conditions. The
remaining BMT patients undergo the procedure for a variety of genetic
disorders, including sickle cell disease. Children’s Hospital has
completed three successful BMT for sickle cell disease over the past
year. In the United States, there have been approximately 100 cases in
which BMT was used for sickle cell disease, and about 150 cases in the
world.
Sickle cell disease affects a person’s ability to make
normal red blood cells. Their cells form rigid structures that look like
sickles and clog up small blood vessels depriving tissues of oxygen.
This produces extreme pain and can cause damage to the body’s organs.
BMT works as a cure for sickle cell disease because red blood cells come from
mother cells that originate in bone marrow. BMT wipes out the bone
marrow a child is born with, and replaces it with a healthy sibling’s
who has the same tissue type. After the procedure, normal red blood
cells are produced from the new bone marrow and the disease is cured.
Amanda Termuhlen, MD, associate chief of Hematology/Oncology at Columbus
Children’s Hospital, and a faculty member at The Ohio State University
College of Medicine, explained that BMT is only used for the most severe
sufferers of sickle cell because of the risk factors associated with
transplantation.
“The procedure itself has about a five percent
mortality rate,” Termuhlen said. “Not every child with sickle cell is
the same. Some children will have very few problems; some will have
chronic and life-threatening problems. Our current approach is to pick
children who are severely affected with multiple pain episodes, and are
at risk of stroke, or are at risk for dying from sickle cell disease at
a very young age.”
Only non-afflicted, full siblings are
suitable for transplantation. Less than 19 percent, or one-in-five
children with sickle cell, will find a suitable donor.
At
Columbus Children’s Hospital, there is new hope for a young girl Kimmi
Desir. Kimmi became the first sickle cell BMT recipient at Children’s
when she received a transplant from her sister Melissa Desir.
Transplants are considered successful if the recipient is healthy a year
after the procedure. While Kimmi has passed that mile marker with flying
colors, she continues to be monitored by specialists at Children’s
Hospital.
“To be able to help those children who are at a higher
risk of having complications, and being able to offer a cure for their
disease is critical,” Termuhlen said. “It provides a service from
toddlers to older teenagers with sickle cell disease.”
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