Stem Cell Transplant and Cellular Therapies
At UI Stead Family Children’s Hospital, we focus on helping your child become whole again. From a child-friendly treatment environment to post-treatment and rehabilitation services and recovery, we offer the region’s top-ranked services for your child’s needs.
Conditions we treat
Stem cell transplant is an effective treatment for many diseases, including cancers and other blood disorders. The stem cell transplant team at UI Stead Family Children’s Hospital offers advanced expertise in treating some of the most complex diseases and conditions that affect your child.
When initial treatment for leukemia is successful or the cancer is in remission but a child faces a reoccurrence, a bone marrow or stem cell transplant can be a treatment option many families consider. There are several treatments for relapsed leukemia. The goal of transplant is to destroy the cancer cells in the bone marrow using a higher dosage of chemotherapy. This complex treatment replaces the cancer cells with new, healthy blood-forming stem cells. Certain leukemia patients who do not respond to chemotherapy can benefit from cellular therapy. CAR T-cell therapy, for example, helps cure leukemia without the need for stem cell transplant, and it can pave the way for a successful stem cell transplant in the future.
While transplantation treatment can be an option for lymphoma patients, it is slightly rarer. It can be an effective part of a treatment plan for patients who are in remission or who have relapsed because it allows for a higher dose of chemotherapy.
When a patient has abnormal hemoglobin, that often results in sickle cell disease. The misshapen cells cannot carry oxygen as well as healthy cells. There are a number of highly effective treatments for the symptoms of sickle cell disease, but stem cell transplant is the only curative option available. Some patients have been successfully treated with stem cell transplants.
These abnormal masses can be benign (non-cancerous) or malignant (cancerous). Some tumors that are treated with stem cell transplant include central nervous system (CNS) tumors, such as primitive neuroectodermal tumors, Ewing sarcoma, esthesioneuroblastoma, medulloblastoma, atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor, and Wilm’s tumor. Patients with these conditions receive their own stem cells, which are collected and frozen, for treatment after high-dose chemotherapy.
For children with severe immune deficiency, such as severe combined immunodeficiency, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, or chronic granulomatous disease, transplants work to replace an unhealthy immune system with a healthy one.
Treatments and services designed for each patient
Your child deserves treatment the right treatment. There are several different types of stem cell transplant treatments, and the most effective transplant will depend on your child’s needs. Your child may also need other services such as radiation or chemotherapy. Our team works with you to find the best type of transplant and treatment plan for your child.
Also known as a rescue transplant, this treatment involves removing healthy stem cells from your child before high-dose radiation or chemotherapy to treat the illness. After treatment, the healthy, preserved cells are put back in your child to regenerate healthy blood cells.
A specific type of autologous transplant, this treatment removes stem cells from your child’s blood rather than bone marrow.
During this type of transplant, a donor gives stem cells to your child. In general, the donor must match your child’s genes, so siblings or other relatives can often be a donor. If no relatives match, your child’s team will work with the National Marrow Donor Program to find a matching donor. We can also perform stem cell transplant using a half-matched family member.
Similar to how an allogeneic transplant is performed, stem cells are removed from the umbilical cord and placenta of a newborn baby immediately after birth. These cells are then frozen until needed for transplant. Umbilical cord blood transplant is a good option for children whose disease is more difficult to match because these cells are less developed and can match well with a broader number of patients.
CAR T-cell therapy uses white blood cells to attack cancer cells. During this process, your child’s immune system is reprogrammed to track and kill cancer cells.
Why choose UI Stead Family Children’s Hospital?
We know there are many things to consider when choosing your child’s care. The stem cell transplant program at UI Stead Family Children’s Hospital is accredited by the Foundation for the Accreditation of Cellular Therapy and brings together comprehensive care and an environment that supports your child at every step of the journey.
Your child deserves coordinated care to match whatever needs arise. Stem cell transplants require coordination among many different groups of specialists. Our multidisciplinary approach brings together nurses, therapists, social workers, and mental health providers to ensure your child will be cared for at every step. All the care your child needs is in one location.
The team at UI Stead Family Children’s Hospital works every day to improve care, lessen the side effects of cancer treatment, and create new and better therapies through the use of clinical trials. All of our open clinical trials can be found on our clinical trials website.
Our Care Team
- Cancer and Blood Disease
- Cancer and Blood Disease
- Department of Pediatrics
- Cancer and Blood Disease
- Cancer and Blood Disease
- Department of Pediatrics
- Cancer and Blood Disease
- Department of Pediatrics
- Cancer and Blood Disease
- Department of Pediatrics
- Cancer and Blood Disease
- Department of Pediatrics
- Cancer and Blood Disease
- Department of Pediatrics
- Cancer and Blood Disease
- Department of Pediatrics
- Cancer and Blood Disease
- Department of Pediatrics
- Transplant
- Cancer and Blood Disease
Megan Soliday, Pediatric Educator