With a current waiting list of 30 to 40 children, and a
referral base that is worldwide, the Duke Pediatric Blood and
Marrow Transplant (BMT) Program is the largest
children’s transplant program in the world, now
transplanting some 100 children annually.
It is a program of last resort: These children have a life
expectancy of less than one year without a transplant.
Innovation and Research
Duke was the first to use umbilical cord blood from
unrelated donors to cure life-threatening cancers, rare immune
deficiencies, and metabolic diseases. Because patients do not
require an exact blood “HLA” match with cord blood as they do
with bone marrow, it is easier to find a cord blood match
providing access to this life-saving therapy for patients
unable to find a fully matched donor.
Duke was also the first to prove that bone marrow
transplants could cure severe combined immune deficiency if
administered in the first months of life.
Recently, our researchers showed that transplantation can
also be an effective treatment for Hurler’s syndrome, a rare
metabolic disease (MPS1) in which patients suffer from
progressive brain, liver, heart, bone, cartilage, and cornea
damage due to a missing enzyme.
In addition, transplantation has proved effective in
treating some cases of Krabbe disease, Sanfilippo syndrome (MPS
III), metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD), and
adenoleukodystrophy (ALD). Duke researchers are continually
studying other conditions that might be successfully treated
with transplantation.