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Results from the 2014 Transplant Activity Survey suggest the use of hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) is still on the rise in Europe.
The European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) introduced this survey in 1990 to assess the use of HSCT in Europe.
Every year, all EBMT members and affiliated teams report their number of transplant patients by indication, donor type, and stem cell source.
Results from the 2014 survey revealed that 40,829 HSCTs were conducted in 36,469 patients at 656 centers in 47 countries. Fifty-seven percent of these transplants were autologous (n=20,704), and 43% were allogeneic (n=15,765).
When compared to data from the 2013 survey, the total number of transplants increased by 4.1%—4.5% for allogeneic HSCT and 3.8% for autologous HSCT.
The greatest increases in allogeneic HSCT occurred in Romania, Russia, Turkey, Croatia, Lithuania, and Serbia. And the greatest increases for autologous HSCT occurred in Romania, Serbia, Russia, Turkey, and Iran.
The most common indication for HSCT in 2014 was lymphoid neoplasias (57%, n=20,802), followed by leukemias (33%, n=11,853), non-malignant disorders (6%, n=2203), and solid tumors (4%, n=1458).
Compared to data from 2013, there was an increase in allogeneic HSCT for a few indications. There was a 13% increase in allogeneic HSCT for acute myeloid leukemia in first complete remission, a 14% increase for myeloproliferative neoplasms, and a 12% increase for severe aplastic anemia.
For autologous HSCT, there was a 21% decrease for chronic lymphocytic leukemia, a 5% increase for myeloma, a 44% increase for amyloidosis, an 8% increase for Hodgkin lymphoma, and a 40% increase for autoimmune diseases.
For more details, see the full report in Bone Marrow Transplantation.
Photo by Chad McNeeley
Results from the 2014 Transplant Activity Survey suggest the use of hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) is still on the rise in Europe.
The European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) introduced this survey in 1990 to assess the use of HSCT in Europe.
Every year, all EBMT members and affiliated teams report their number of transplant patients by indication, donor type, and stem cell source.
Results from the 2014 survey revealed that 40,829 HSCTs were conducted in 36,469 patients at 656 centers in 47 countries. Fifty-seven percent of these transplants were autologous (n=20,704), and 43% were allogeneic (n=15,765).
When compared to data from the 2013 survey, the total number of transplants increased by 4.1%—4.5% for allogeneic HSCT and 3.8% for autologous HSCT.
The greatest increases in allogeneic HSCT occurred in Romania, Russia, Turkey, Croatia, Lithuania, and Serbia. And the greatest increases for autologous HSCT occurred in Romania, Serbia, Russia, Turkey, and Iran.
The most common indication for HSCT in 2014 was lymphoid neoplasias (57%, n=20,802), followed by leukemias (33%, n=11,853), non-malignant disorders (6%, n=2203), and solid tumors (4%, n=1458).
Compared to data from 2013, there was an increase in allogeneic HSCT for a few indications. There was a 13% increase in allogeneic HSCT for acute myeloid leukemia in first complete remission, a 14% increase for myeloproliferative neoplasms, and a 12% increase for severe aplastic anemia.
For autologous HSCT, there was a 21% decrease for chronic lymphocytic leukemia, a 5% increase for myeloma, a 44% increase for amyloidosis, an 8% increase for Hodgkin lymphoma, and a 40% increase for autoimmune diseases.
For more details, see the full report in Bone Marrow Transplantation.
Photo by Chad McNeeley
Results from the 2014 Transplant Activity Survey suggest the use of hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) is still on the rise in Europe.
The European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) introduced this survey in 1990 to assess the use of HSCT in Europe.
Every year, all EBMT members and affiliated teams report their number of transplant patients by indication, donor type, and stem cell source.
Results from the 2014 survey revealed that 40,829 HSCTs were conducted in 36,469 patients at 656 centers in 47 countries. Fifty-seven percent of these transplants were autologous (n=20,704), and 43% were allogeneic (n=15,765).
When compared to data from the 2013 survey, the total number of transplants increased by 4.1%—4.5% for allogeneic HSCT and 3.8% for autologous HSCT.
The greatest increases in allogeneic HSCT occurred in Romania, Russia, Turkey, Croatia, Lithuania, and Serbia. And the greatest increases for autologous HSCT occurred in Romania, Serbia, Russia, Turkey, and Iran.
The most common indication for HSCT in 2014 was lymphoid neoplasias (57%, n=20,802), followed by leukemias (33%, n=11,853), non-malignant disorders (6%, n=2203), and solid tumors (4%, n=1458).
Compared to data from 2013, there was an increase in allogeneic HSCT for a few indications. There was a 13% increase in allogeneic HSCT for acute myeloid leukemia in first complete remission, a 14% increase for myeloproliferative neoplasms, and a 12% increase for severe aplastic anemia.
For autologous HSCT, there was a 21% decrease for chronic lymphocytic leukemia, a 5% increase for myeloma, a 44% increase for amyloidosis, an 8% increase for Hodgkin lymphoma, and a 40% increase for autoimmune diseases.
For more details, see the full report in Bone Marrow Transplantation.