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For patients unlikely to have a fully matched donor, their team should quickly switch to searching for alternate (mismatched) donors

Results of a new study show transplant should not be delayed waiting for a fully matched donor.

Age0 - 76 years old
Number of Participants1,751
Research GoalIncrease Access
BMT can cure some cancers and blood disorders. However, 2 out of 3 patients do not have a completely matched sibling who can donate to them. 

In the past, BMT might be delayed for months during the search for a fully matched unrelated donor. Meanwhile, patients got sicker and needed more treatment. 

After a new study, doctors say that no one should wait long for BMT. People who are very unlikely to have a matched donor should quickly get BMT from a mismatched donor. Newer approaches, such as using post-transplant cyclophosphamide, can prevent side effects from the mismatch. 

The likelihood of having a fully matched donor depends on genetic markers called HLA, as well as ancestry. 


About 1800 people volunteered in a recent clinical trial of donor selection. Everyone had aplastic anemia, leukemia, lymphoma, myelodysplastic syndrome, or sickle cell disease. Researchers used a tool to divide people into 3 groups, by patients’ likelihood of having a fully matched donor: 
  • Very likely 
  • Less likely 
  • Unlikely 
Most patients who were unlikely to have a full match got BMT from a mismatched donor. The group that was very likely to have a fully matched donor and those very unlikely to find a fully matched donor took about the same time to get to transplant and had same likelihood to receive BMT.

About 2 years later, survival of the 3 groups of patients was not different.

Doctors said it is more important to have the transplant when you are ready for it than to wait for a fully matched donor. 

Keep in mind 

Each person’s health is different. Ask your doctor about treatments.
 

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