Business World

SLMC GC pioneers mismatch stem cell transplant

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TWO of the major problems Stem Cell transplant patients face involve the availabili­ty of a donor and the fiscal estimate of the treatment. The Mismatch Stem Cell Transplant­ation, pioneered by the St. Luke’s Medical Center Global City (SLMC GC) Stem Cell Center, led by Dr. Francisco Lopez, head of the Bone and Marrow Transplant Unit, addresses these pressing issues.

“We pioneered this program using any donor in the family whether it’s a [parent] or a child,” he said. This therefore gives a greater chance for patients to proceed with the treatment.

For patients with blood- related problems like Leukemia and Aplastic Anemia, a Bone Marrow Transplant (BMT) may be the necessary treatment. During the 1950s, BMT was considered to be experiment­al, until further research paved the way to its developmen­t through the discovery of medication to improve the outcome of the treatment’s results, and tissue typing in order to determine whether or not an individual is qualified as a potential donor.

The Mismatch Stem Cell Transplant, also known as Haploident­ical Stem Cell Transplant (HSCT), was introduced in the country by SLMC for the benefit of patients without a complete matched sibling donor. Thus, allowing a parent, child, or a mismatch sibling to become a donor. The results of this treatment are as effective as the other kinds of Blood and Marrow Transplant. Add to that, there is the supplement­ary benefit of expediting the beginning of the whole process, given that time is a great factor in treating a patient. Through the mismatch program of SLMC, the procedure is made more accessible and cost-effective to Filipinos.

“From our experience in St. Luke’s Global City, the range of a HSCT is somewhere between P1.6 to P2 million, or even less,” Dr. Lopez clarified.

He also shared that he had patients in the past who underwent complicati­on-free procedures, resulting in a lower or average overall hospital bill. There are eight primary cost variables for the Stem Cell Transplant, including age (pediatric or adult), weight, conditioni­ng regimen, number of stem cell harvests, units of blood transfusio­ns given, intravenou­s antibiotic­s for infections, length of stay in the isolated hepa-filtered positive pressure room, and the need for intravenou­s nutrition.

The specialist­s of the Stem Cell Center came together with patients who underwent transplant­ations at the Center to honor the gift of life last Feb. 17.

For more informatio­n, contact the St. Luke’s Medical Center Global City Stem Cell Center at 789-7700 ext. 2103 or 2096.

 ??  ?? (L-R) St. Luke’s Global City’s highly skilled stem cell specialist­s: Dr. Ernesto Datu, Dr. Arvin Faundo, Dr. Francisco Lopez, and Dr. Rodelio Lim.
(L-R) St. Luke’s Global City’s highly skilled stem cell specialist­s: Dr. Ernesto Datu, Dr. Arvin Faundo, Dr. Francisco Lopez, and Dr. Rodelio Lim.

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