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Request an Appointment with codes: Cancer and Blood Disorders (CCBD)
Stem cell transplants are used to treat certain diseases, including some cancers, by replacing unhealthy cells with healthy stem cells.
214-456-2382
Fax: 214-456-6133
469-303-4400
Fax: 469-303-4420
Request an Appointment with codes: Cancer and Blood Disorders (CCBD)
Stem cells are the basic cell and foundation for every organ and tissue in the body. Stem cells are “unspecialized” cells, which means they don’t have a specific body function. However, stem cells have the potential to become specialized cells. They can divide, copy and renew themselves over time.
Patients can receive healthy cells (stem cells) to replace bone marrow cells destroyed by diseases like cancer, or treatments like radiation or chemotherapy. Stem cell transplants can come from a donor (allogeneic) or the patient (autologous).
Stem cell transplants can come from a donor or the patient, and healthy stems cells can be taken from various parts of the body.
Patients run the risk of rejecting these stem cells because they are foreign to the body. However, because they come from a donor, the new stem cells can also recognize cancer cells as foreign and destroy them.
This type of transplant can treat blood cancers, such as leukemia, lymphomas and multiple myeloma (cancerous plasma cells), as well as bone marrow disorders or cancers.
This type of stem cell transplant is used to treat leukemia, lymphomas and multiple myeloma. It can also be used to treat testicular cancer and neuroblastoma, which is a type of cancer that starts in early forms of nerve cells.
Stem cells are typically taken from the following areas for transplant: