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Frequently
Asked Questions about Cord Blood Banking
(Posted January 2007)
See related news release: AAP Encourages Public Cord Blood Banking
1. What is the difference
between private cord blood banking and public cord blood banking?
- Private cord
blood banking is storing the baby's cord blood for his/her own future
use or use for a family member should the need arise. Alternatively,
public cord blood banking, or donating, means that the baby's cord
blood is stored in a cord blood bank and is available to anyone in
need of a transplant or may be used research purposes.
2. I've been approached
by a self-storage program to store my child's cord blood. Isn't it better
to be safe than sorry? Should I store it or donate it?
Parents should consult
their physician to help them make an informed decision.
- Cord blood donation
should be encouraged with the cord blood is stored in a bank for public
use.
- Private cord
blood banking should be encouraged when there is knowledge of a full
sibling in the family with a medical condition (malignant or genetic)
that could potentially benefit from cord blood transplantation.
- If banking for
future personal or family use, parents should know that most conditions
that might be helped by cord blood stem cells already exist in the
infant's cord blood and would not be used (ie, premalignant changes
in stem cells).
- Storing cord
blood as "biological insurance" should be discouraged because
there currently is no scientific data to support (self) autologous
transplantation..
3. Where can I donate
cord blood?
- Contact your
local hospital to determine if it is affiliated with a cord blood
bank or contact any major university hospital or medical center in
your state to find out if they accept cord blood donations.
4. Why isn't there
a cord blood bank in my area?
- There are only
a few cord blood banks in the United States; therefore, donation to
a local bank is not possible in many areas. Many communities do not
have the technical and financial resources necessary to establish
and operate a cord blood bank.
5. Does it cost
anything to donate cord blood?
- The public donor
cord blood banks pay for the collection procedure and storing of the
baby's cord blood, so there is no cost to the family for donating
the baby's cord blood. However, there are significant fees associated
with private storage of cord blood often including both the collection
and the storage.
6. Are there any
risks to donating cord blood?
- No, because the
cord blood is collected after the baby is born and the umbilical cord
is clamped and cut, it does not affect the baby or the birth experience.
Cord blood collection should not be performed in complicated deliveries.
The cord blood stem cell-collection program should not alter routine
practice for the timing of umbilical cord clamping.
7. What will happen
to my child's cord blood if I donate it?
- If a family decides
to donate a baby's cord blood and there is a cord blood bank in the
area, the mother will need to obtain a collection kit that may include
a family medical history questionnaire, a consent form, and the collection
materials. The informed consent must be signed prior to the onset
of active labor and before the cord blood collection. The consent
must contain information pertaining to what tests are to be performed
on the cord blood and how the parents will be informed should the
test results be abnormal. Once a baby's cord blood is collected, it
is typed, screened for infectious diseases and for hereditary hematologic
diseases. If the donation is large enough and meets all of the required
standards, it will be cryogenically stored for potential transplantation
if a match is found or it might be used for quality improvement and
research.
8. How does donated
cord blood help others?
- It can help treat
diseases such as malignancies, bone marrow failure, hemoglobinopathies,
immunodeficiencies, and/or inborn errors of metabolism.
9. How long can
cord blood be stored before it expires?
- Research is ongoing
about the storage life of cord blood units.
10. How soon should
I notify the cord blood bank in my area that I want to donate?
- The cord blood
bank should be notified approximately 4-6 weeks before the due date
or about week 34 of pregnancy.
11. If it turns
out my child does need the cord blood, can I retrieve his/her's cord
blood from the bank I donated to?
- Cord blood banked
in a public program might not be available for future private use.
Most conditions that might be helped by cord blood stems cells already
exist in the infant's cord blood (ie, premalignant changes in stem
cells).
12. If I decide
to use a private cord blood bank, is there anything specific I should
look for when selecting one?·
- Does the company
bank for personal and family use?
- Institutional
Review Board-approved protocols should be in place, including annual
disclosure of the financial interest and potential conflicts of interest.
- Financial viability
and stability of the company should be considered
- Physician should
disclose any potential conflict of interest.
- Company should
have an informed consent process in place and require the parent to
sign an informed consent.
- Cord blood banks
should comply with national accreditation standards developed by the
Foundation for the Accreditation of Cellular Therapy (FACT), the US
Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Federal Trade Commission,
and similar state agencies.
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