Трансплантация костного мозга
Обзор
Отделение трансплантации костного мозга (ТКМ) является крупнейшим педиатрическим центром ТКМ в Великобритании. Мы предоставляем комплексные услуги по пересадке гемопоэтических стволовых клеток детям с гематологическими, иммунологическими, метаболическими, ревматологическими и гастроэнтерологическими заболеваниями, угрожающими жизни.
Подходящие доноры среди членов семьи есть только у 20% наших пациентов, поэтому многие трансплантации выполняются из костного мозга взрослых добровольцев, стволовых клеток периферической крови или пуповинной крови. Отделение специализируется на снижении токсичности пересаживаемых клеток и клеточной терапии для лечения вирусных осложнений после трансплантации. Совместно с Институтом детского здоровья UCL мы проводим передовые исследования, посвященные генной терапии и иммунотерапии.
Отделение аккредитовано JACIE, единственным в Европе сертификационным органом в области трансплантации костного мозга, и может предложить услугу получения второго мнения для клиницистов со всего мира.
Посмотрите видео об отделении ТКМ в GOSH.
Клинические результаты
В отделении ТКМ работает комплексная служба трансплантации стволовых клеток (ТСК) для детей с угрожающими жизни заболеваниями. Отделение ТКМ является крупнейшим педиатрическим центром трансплантации костного мозга в Великобритании и в настоящее время ежегодно проводит около 90 процедур трансплантации.
Мы оцениваем результаты трансплантации различными способами, включая выживаемость при всех заболеваниях, выживаемость в группах с похожими заболеваниями и осложнения после лечения.
Общая выживаемость наших пациентов при пересадке аллотрансплантата составляет 85%. Общая выживаемость пациентов при пересадке аллотрансплантата – только при злокачественных опухолях – составляет 79%. Злокачественные опухоли имеют самую низкую общую выживаемость среди всех заболеваний, лечение которых проводится с помощью трансплантации стволовых клеток, потому что дети, которые предварительно прошли курс химиотерапии, могут быть сильнее подвержены токсичности во время трансплантации стволовых клеток. Текущие клинические исследования направлены на получение дополнительных знаний о том, как улучшить показатели выживаемости.
Для получения дополнительной информации о наших клинических результатах, пожалуйста, нажмите здесь.
Заболевания, которые мы лечим
- Лейкемия
- Твердые опухоли
- Нарушение работы костного мозга
- Иммунодефицитные заболевания
- Наследственные нарушения обмена веществ
- Аутоиммунные или иммунные дисрегуляторные заболевания
Направьте своего ребенка на лечение
Используйте приведенную ниже форму, чтобы направить своего ребенка на лечение. Сотрудник нашей команды свяжется с вами в течение двух рабочих дней.
Поля, обязательные для заполнения
FAQs
Different types of BMT are named according to the relationship between the patient (recipient) and the person from whom the stem cells are obtained (donor).
STEM CELL TRANSPLANT - Autologous BMT – using the patient’s own stem cells Autologous BMT involve the collection of the patient's own stem cells, either by harvesting bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC's). These cells are then frozen and stored. When required, the cells are reinfused (given back) to the patient after high doses of chemotherapy. When the frozen cells are given back to the patient they will rapidly regrow and replace those cells destroyed by the high dose chemotherapy. Because the marrow is that of the patient, there are fewer complications than after a transplant using bone marrow from another individual. An Autologous BMT is most commonly used to allow bigger doses of chemotherapy or radiotherapy to be given to treat oncology tumours such as neuroblastoma and medulloblastoma.
CAR T cell therapy - same theory as stem cell transplant but the patient's cells are sent away for 'manufacturing' before being reimplanted in the patient GOSH was the first hospital in the UK to offer a new pioneering cancer therapy to patients with leukaemia. Patients with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) can now receive the new personalised treatment, known as CAR-T therapy. This is the first treatment of its kind to become available to UK and international patients in the UK CAR-T therapies are specifically tailored for individual patients and work by harnessing the patient’s own immune system to fight cancer. In a complex manufacturing process, immune cells are taken from a patient’s blood and reprogrammed to specifically to target and kill cancer cells. ALL is a severe form of leukaemia that affects around 600 people per year, most of whom are children between the age of 2 and 5. Although the outlook for children with ALL has dramatically improved over the last decade, 10-15% of patients still do not respond to standard treatments. This therapy has been shown to be effective in treating patients with particularly aggressive or relapsed cancers where other treatments have failed.
Allogeneic BMT - using donor cells for the patient Allogeneic BMT are transplants from a donor. The most common and most suitable donor used is a brother or sister of the patient. HLA antigens, the tissue typing groups important in establishing compatibility between donor and recipient, are inherited half from each parent. This means any brother / sister pair have a 1:4 chance of being HLA identical and therefore suitable as a donor / recipient pair for a BMT. Unless parents are related ie. cousins, they are rarely suitable as donors for their children. Sometimes however, a search in the extended family may identify a suitable relative (parent, grandparent, aunt or uncle ) who is fully matched or only mismatched at one of the 6 major HLA antigens. A relative who matches at 5:6 of the HLA antigens is a suitable donor for a transplant but more complications are expected than if a fully matched brother or sister is the donor.
MUD - Matched unrelated donor Patients who do not have a suitable donor in the family, may find an unrelated donor on one of the world wide Volunteer Bone Marrow Donor registries. Searching these registries and identifying a suitable donor is a time consuming and expensive exercise. Although a donor will not be identified for all patients, many who otherwise could not have a BMT are now able to benefit from the good will of these volunteers. As with a family mismatched donor, the risks associated with a matched unrelated donor BMT (MUD) are greater than with a sibling transplant. Should your child require a MUD BMT the consultant will provide you with more detailed information.
CORD Cell Transplant Cord blood is the blood that remains in the placenta and umbilical cord following the birth of a baby. It is rich in blood stem cells (similar to those found in bone marrow) and these can be used to treat many different cancers, immune deficiencies and genetic disorders. Large banks of stored, donated cord bloods are now available for searching around the world and may provide suitable stem cells even when no bone marrow donor is available. Cord blood is being used increasingly as a source of stem cells for transplantation instead of bone marrow.
All patients are transplanted in isolation rooms with positive pressure/HEPA filters and regular airflow changes. At GOSH the transplant wards have regular enhanced clinics in common areas to try and reduce environmental contamination. At GOSH we cap the number of carers per patient that can access the isolation cubicles during transplant to 3 people, to limit the possibility of infections being carried to the room of the patient. All personnel is regularly trained is performing care through aseptic techniques. Patients receive regular drugs for antifungal, antiviral, and antibacterial prophylaxis throughout the transplant.
Donor search at GOSH is conducted through Antony Nolan which is the accredited UK agency for worldwide donor search. A preliminary idea of how successful a donor search is can be conducted within 2 weeks from receiving the patient blood sample. Once this preliminary search is finalised, we will be in the position of understanding if the patient has a likelihood of having a full-matched donor or not. This is relevant information as if there are reduced chances of a matched donor the decision could be made (depending on patients' need and disease characteristics) to switch to a haploidentical donor to avoid delays in transplant.
In some other circumstances, where transplant might not be urgent, we would continue searching the registry to identify the best donor among the potentially available. In the best-case scenario, a cord blood unit can be available for transplant within 4 weeks from starting the search and an unrelated adult donor within 6 weeks. Obviously, when the donor is an unrelated adult donor, some constraints are related to the schedule of the donor. In this setting, it is very convenient to be in a centre (like GOSH) , which offers transplants from various sources/donors as that gives the patient the best choice of receiving the most appropriate transplantation in the most appropriate time frame from the best available donor.
Indications for autologous and allogeneic stem cell transplant are standardized at national levels, and GOSH complies with national guidelines to this regard. A very broad explanation could be that children with leukemia/lymphoma who fail conventional chemotherapy are candidate for allogeneic stem cell transplant whereas autologous transplant is used for solid tumor treatment. Congenital immunological or metabolic disorders are amenable to allogeneic stem cell transplant
This will depend on the trial, on the ability of the referring country to comply with long-term follow-up, and on the trial specifications. There have been private patients enrolled on some of these trials before, but the problematic point had previously been guaranteeing compliance to the long-term follow up which requires the patient to travel to London on a yearly basis for up to 10 years post-treatment for trial-related follow-ups.