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Bone Marrow Transplant



 
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fiftyeggs
Sea Monkey
Sea Monkey



Joined: 15 Apr 2005
Posts: 13

Location: Moorhead MN

PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 2:47 am    Post subject: Bone Marrow Transplant Reply with quote

Does anyone know about this treatment? My drs. have been discussing this as a possibility very, very recently. My husband looked it up and found that the Univ of Chicago does it on an experimental basis, but U of Pennsylvania and U of MN are also adding it for SLE patients. Some of the preliminary numbers are suggesting that there could be a cure rate. Could this be true, and if so, why would that be?
What would be involved?
This is probably a question for the moderator, but I wanted to run it by everyone to see if there is any info out there. Thanks and be well.
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Saysusie
Moderator
Moderator



Joined: 11 Nov 2001
Posts: 4176

Location: Victorville, California

PostPosted: Sun Apr 17, 2005 3:13 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi Fiftyeggs;
A stem-cell transplant is a procedure where bone marrow is extracted from either the person with the disease, or a healthy donor. The transplants done to date in people with arthritis have only involved bone marrow cells taken from the person with arthritis ? so-called ?autologous? stem-cell transplantation. Most of the bone marrow cells are removed leaving predominately ?stem cells,? or immature bone marrow cells that have the potential to grow, divide and develop.
Meanwhile, the person undergoing the transplant is put through a ?cleansing system? to eliminate cells in the bone marrow in the body. This cleansing usually is achieved through high-dose chemotherapy or radiation treatment that dramatically suppresses the immune system. When this is done, the purified stem cells from the extraction are injected back into the body where they, hopefully, will repopulate the marrow with healthy cells, causing a complete remission.
This is a risky procedure and is only performed on people with severe, life-threatening arthritis, and recently SLE, who have failed with all other standard therapy. In several meetings dedicated to stem-cell transplantation in children with rheumatic diseases, pediatric rheumatologists and bone marrow specialists from North America and Europe worked to develop guidelines for deciding who should be considered a candidate for this treatment, details about the preparation of both the stem cells and the patients, and information to be gathered before and after the transplant so as to better understand the impact of the procedure on the person.
Currently stem-cell transplantation is considered an investigational procedure, and is only preformed in specialized centers participating in research studies of the procedure. A major consequence of stem-cell transplants is suppression of the immune system, which means the body's defense mechanisms are completely wiped out. Therefore, the common cold or a normally harmless virus could lead to a serious, and even life-threatening, infection. To ward against this, hospitalization is required until all treatment is completed, but this doesn't insure protection against infection or other complications.
In addition, there is a risk that the transplanted cells will not repopulate successfully. This could mean that you can be left with no or a partially effective immune system. Because of these risks, death occurs in five to 15 percent of all stem-cell transplants. You can expect to spend between several weeks to several months in the hospital, depending on how your body reacts, complications that may arise and, most importantly, how quickly the stem cells develop into an adequate immune system.
Calling a successful stem-cell transplant a cure is still under debate.
While there is often no evidence of the primary disease after a transplant, many doctors still feel that the procedure needs more long-term follow-up before saying that it is definitely a cure. Some of the successful transplant recipients have experienced a recurrence of disease, although the activity was not as severe as it was before.
If your doctors are considering this, make sure that you, and they, are very thorough in investigating the pros and cons of this treatment!!
I wish you the very best!!
Saysusie
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