Hematopoietic SCT in Europe 2013: recent trends in the use of alternative donors showing more haploidentical donors but fewer cord blood transplants

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Hematopoietic SCT in Europe 2013: recent trends in the use of alternative donors showing more haploidentical donors but fewer cord blood transplants. / Passweg, J R; Baldomero, H; Bader, P; Bonini, C; Cesaro, S; Dreger, P; Duarte, R F; Dufour, C; Falkenburg, J H F; Farge-Bancel, D; Gennery, A; Kröger, N; Lanza, F; Nagler, A; Sureda, A; Mohty, M.

In: BONE MARROW TRANSPL, Vol. 50, No. 4, 02.02.2015, p. 476-482.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Passweg, JR, Baldomero, H, Bader, P, Bonini, C, Cesaro, S, Dreger, P, Duarte, RF, Dufour, C, Falkenburg, JHF, Farge-Bancel, D, Gennery, A, Kröger, N, Lanza, F, Nagler, A, Sureda, A & Mohty, M 2015, 'Hematopoietic SCT in Europe 2013: recent trends in the use of alternative donors showing more haploidentical donors but fewer cord blood transplants', BONE MARROW TRANSPL, vol. 50, no. 4, pp. 476-482. https://doi.org/10.1038/bmt.2014.312

APA

Passweg, J. R., Baldomero, H., Bader, P., Bonini, C., Cesaro, S., Dreger, P., Duarte, R. F., Dufour, C., Falkenburg, J. H. F., Farge-Bancel, D., Gennery, A., Kröger, N., Lanza, F., Nagler, A., Sureda, A., & Mohty, M. (2015). Hematopoietic SCT in Europe 2013: recent trends in the use of alternative donors showing more haploidentical donors but fewer cord blood transplants. BONE MARROW TRANSPL, 50(4), 476-482. https://doi.org/10.1038/bmt.2014.312

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{03e35ed6f5ec4a60a25e91701a0674ae,
title = "Hematopoietic SCT in Europe 2013: recent trends in the use of alternative donors showing more haploidentical donors but fewer cord blood transplants",
abstract = "A record number of 39 209 HSCT in 34 809 patients (14 950 allogeneic (43%) and 19 859 autologous (57%)) were reported by 658 centers in 48 countries to the 2013 survey. Trends include: more growth in allogeneic than in autologous HSCT, increasing use of sibling and unrelated donors and a pronounced increase in haploidentical family donors when compared with cord blood donors for those patients without a matched related or unrelated donor. Main indications were leukemias, 11 190 (32%; 96% allogeneic); lymphoid neoplasias, 19 958 (57%; 11% allogeneic); solid tumors, 1543 (4%; 4% allogeneic); and nonmalignant disorders, 1975 (6%; 91% allogeneic). In patients without a matched sibling or unrelated donor, alternative donors are used. Since 2010 there has been a marked increase of 96% in the number of transplants performed from haploidentical relatives (802 in 2010 to 1571 in 2013), whereas the number of unrelated cord blood transplants has slightly decreased (789 in 2010 to 666 in 2013). The use of donor type varies greatly throughout Europe.Bone Marrow Transplantation advance online publication, 2 February 2015; doi:10.1038/bmt.2014.312.",
author = "Passweg, {J R} and H Baldomero and P Bader and C Bonini and S Cesaro and P Dreger and Duarte, {R F} and C Dufour and Falkenburg, {J H F} and D Farge-Bancel and A Gennery and N Kr{\"o}ger and F Lanza and A Nagler and A Sureda and M Mohty",
year = "2015",
month = feb,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1038/bmt.2014.312",
language = "English",
volume = "50",
pages = "476--482",
journal = "BONE MARROW TRANSPL",
issn = "0268-3369",
publisher = "NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Hematopoietic SCT in Europe 2013: recent trends in the use of alternative donors showing more haploidentical donors but fewer cord blood transplants

AU - Passweg, J R

AU - Baldomero, H

AU - Bader, P

AU - Bonini, C

AU - Cesaro, S

AU - Dreger, P

AU - Duarte, R F

AU - Dufour, C

AU - Falkenburg, J H F

AU - Farge-Bancel, D

AU - Gennery, A

AU - Kröger, N

AU - Lanza, F

AU - Nagler, A

AU - Sureda, A

AU - Mohty, M

PY - 2015/2/2

Y1 - 2015/2/2

N2 - A record number of 39 209 HSCT in 34 809 patients (14 950 allogeneic (43%) and 19 859 autologous (57%)) were reported by 658 centers in 48 countries to the 2013 survey. Trends include: more growth in allogeneic than in autologous HSCT, increasing use of sibling and unrelated donors and a pronounced increase in haploidentical family donors when compared with cord blood donors for those patients without a matched related or unrelated donor. Main indications were leukemias, 11 190 (32%; 96% allogeneic); lymphoid neoplasias, 19 958 (57%; 11% allogeneic); solid tumors, 1543 (4%; 4% allogeneic); and nonmalignant disorders, 1975 (6%; 91% allogeneic). In patients without a matched sibling or unrelated donor, alternative donors are used. Since 2010 there has been a marked increase of 96% in the number of transplants performed from haploidentical relatives (802 in 2010 to 1571 in 2013), whereas the number of unrelated cord blood transplants has slightly decreased (789 in 2010 to 666 in 2013). The use of donor type varies greatly throughout Europe.Bone Marrow Transplantation advance online publication, 2 February 2015; doi:10.1038/bmt.2014.312.

AB - A record number of 39 209 HSCT in 34 809 patients (14 950 allogeneic (43%) and 19 859 autologous (57%)) were reported by 658 centers in 48 countries to the 2013 survey. Trends include: more growth in allogeneic than in autologous HSCT, increasing use of sibling and unrelated donors and a pronounced increase in haploidentical family donors when compared with cord blood donors for those patients without a matched related or unrelated donor. Main indications were leukemias, 11 190 (32%; 96% allogeneic); lymphoid neoplasias, 19 958 (57%; 11% allogeneic); solid tumors, 1543 (4%; 4% allogeneic); and nonmalignant disorders, 1975 (6%; 91% allogeneic). In patients without a matched sibling or unrelated donor, alternative donors are used. Since 2010 there has been a marked increase of 96% in the number of transplants performed from haploidentical relatives (802 in 2010 to 1571 in 2013), whereas the number of unrelated cord blood transplants has slightly decreased (789 in 2010 to 666 in 2013). The use of donor type varies greatly throughout Europe.Bone Marrow Transplantation advance online publication, 2 February 2015; doi:10.1038/bmt.2014.312.

U2 - 10.1038/bmt.2014.312

DO - 10.1038/bmt.2014.312

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 25642761

VL - 50

SP - 476

EP - 482

JO - BONE MARROW TRANSPL

JF - BONE MARROW TRANSPL

SN - 0268-3369

IS - 4

ER -