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Canada creating national umbilical cord blood bank

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Date: Monday Mar. 14, 2011 8:32 PM ET

Canada is investing $48 million over the next eight years to create a national public umbilical cord blood bank to help gravely ill Canadians who need stem cell transplants.

The announcement was made Monday in a joint statement by the provincial and territorial ministries of health. Quebec will not take part in the project, as it runs its own cord blood banking program through Hema-Quebec.

If all goes well, a cord blood bank will be up and running in Ottawa within two years, and then expanded to other major Canadian cities over the next four years, says Sue Smith, the executive director of OneMatch Stem Cell and Marrow Network at Canadian Blood Services, which will be managing the cord blood bank.

"Canada is one of the few G20 countries to not have its own national umbilical cord blood bank," she told CTV.ca.

"Canada has this unique mixed-race ethnicities and aboriginal populations. That's why we're going to be targeting those folks in particular."

Umbilical cord blood is a rich source of stem cells and has the advantage of producing fewer complications in transplant patients than other sources.

When patients require stem cell transplants, they have the best chance of finding an appropriate donor from within their own family. But about 70 per cent of patients must look outside of their families for a match. It's hoped that the umbilical cord blood bank will help such patients improve their chances of finding a finding a blood sample that will make a good match.

"Currently, more than 800 Canadian patients are in need of a blood stem cell transplant to help them combat life-threatening diseases such as aplastic anaemia, leukemia, and other blood related and immune disorders," Dr. Graham Sher, the CEO of Canadian Blood Services, said in a news release.

"Umbilical cord blood is a high-quality source of stem cells and a national bank will create a long-term supply that will help reduce Canada's dependency on internationally sourced units."

The cord blood bank will be stocked with umbilical cord blood donated anonymously by the parents of newborns. The donations would then be available for any patient in need.

The bank will be developed and managed by Canadian Blood Services on behalf of the provinces and territories. Over the next eight years, the bank will strive to achieve a target inventory of 20,000 cord blood units.

Smith says even with the donations, there will still be a need for bone marrow donors, as well as stem cells donotions from adults.

"We're also still going to need some cords from international sources," she said. "There isn't a country that's totally self-sufficient in stem cells. But this will help us where the gap is greatest, which is those hard-to-match patients -- in particular, multiethnic patients."

The procedures required to achieve the national public umbilical cord blood bank will be developed through the pilot blood bank in Ottawa. At the same time, a cord blood stem cell laboratory will be established at Canadian Blood Services' facilities in Ottawa.

Phase 2 will see the project expand nationally to a number of Vancouver, Toronto and Edmonton hospitals, along with a second lab in Edmonton by 2016.

Canadian Blood Services will begin a public fundraising campaign over the next three years to raise $12.5 million of the $48 million needed for the cord blood bank.

Comments are now closed for this story

Francine
said
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My granddaughter is alive today because of a cord blood donor from another country.


Dave
said
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Up and running in two years!! A bit late don't you think? This should have been in place years ago! Typical Canadian government dragging it's feet again.


Paul from Vancouver
said
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48 million to save lives, and 29 billion to take them. One really needs to ask "Do we have our priorities straight as a nation?"


Leslie59
said
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Well thats the best news I've heard today!Some new parents are not able to afford to have there childs ord blood stored because its a very expensive procedure.
I know plenty of parents of late that cannot afford it this will put alot of new parents at ease.
Way to go Canada!


High-5
said
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I hear this will actually save a lot of money in the long run. The going rate for one cord blood unit when a match is found outside of the country is approx. $37,000 USD. Over the long run it will cost Canada more to keep importing than to build our own national, public cord blood bank at a cost of $48M.


geebee
said
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Adult stem cells work. This is LONG overdue.


garbarble
said
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That's disgusting! Is it being built right beside the National Vomitorium?

A bunch of umbilical cords hanging around like sausages... HURUUURGHGHHPPHLLLFMHHURRGHkkk HUURGHHK

That was me throwing up.


lector
said
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There are some scientists that are the verge of demonstrating the safety and efficacy of creating pluripotent stem cells from anybody's own adult cells which will be absolutely non-antigenic and so will render this bank superfluous and inferior. This cell bank will only provide a temporary resource until then.


Chris
said
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So does Hema Quebec already have a stem-cell bank? No one asked us to donate our son's cord blood when he was born. We would have if asked. It wasn't even on my mind at the time.


Paul ~ Kitchener
said
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This is a real positive move forward by the government & the provinces. We all know the benefits that "Stem Cell's" can do in specific area's of medical needs. I have only one concern withc "Who will Monitor"c this very special medical bank. We all know that in years past, the system in charge of "Blood" collection, and distribution, fell from grace, in their mis-handling of blood. This is one area of the "Stem Cell Bank" that will have to be fool proof ~ "CONTOL". The Canadian Medical Association will have to be in charge & staffed with Medical Personnel. If this is just another quick medical move, without real research into the "W-5's" on this Medical Bank ,then it will have all kinds of problems & lord knows what medical mistakes. This will also be a real "Money Gobbler", in an already Failing Health Care System. Great Idea, but, at what cost.


Bulldog
said
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Excellent start!


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