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What ails Bone Marrow Transplant in India
Bone Marrow Transplant programme, started way back in 70s,
is crippled by expensive treatment, lack of specialists and shortage of transplant
centres, finds out Shardul Nautiyal
Even as around 1000 patients require bone marrow transplants
(BMT) every year and ideally 50 BMT centres should be offering the treatment,
only around 200 patients are receiving the treatment annually from 15 BMT centres
across the country. Of 15 BMT centers across the country performing both autologous
and allogeneic transplants, 12 centres are performing BMTs regularly, inform
experts. (See box for centres performing BMT).
BMT involves taking out stem cells from BM (cells present
in the bone marrow). These are also present in blood (peripheral blood) in very
small amount, in this case of a donor (sibling or unrelated) to be given to
the patient/recipient (called as allogeneic BMT).
Why we require more BMT centres
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BM Transplant unit at Gujarat Cancer Research Institute
(GCRI), Ahmedabad
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More BMT centres are required because the need for BMT is
alarmingly high in malignant and non-malignant diseases all over India. Hospitals,
having BMT facility, complain of overload of patients. For instance, CMC, Vellore
has a waiting list of Indian patients for elective BM transplants till the June
of next year. Besides this, BMT centres in India are attracting patients from
countries like Pakistan, Maldives, Muscat, Oman, Dubai, Nepal and Mauritius.
According to Dr P M Shah, director, Gujarat Cancer Research
Institute (GCRI), Ahmedabad, The lack of centres is due to limited facilities
in hospitals, high cost of treatment and less number of trained oncologists
or BMT specialists in this field.
Successful running of the BMT centre is possible only if
we have dedicated oncologists. Says Dr P S R K Sastry, consultant medical oncologist,
Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, After chemotherapy, there are complications
like neutropenia, oncologists therefore play the role of a specialist and require
a great deal of expertise.
According to Dr Mammen Chandy, head, BMT Centre, Christian
Medical College (CMC), Vellore, Most doctors after doing D M (oncology)
do not take much interest in this speciality as BMT is very difficult to perform.
Orchestrating extensive support system is another arduous
task. The support system requires trained oncologists, nursing staff, blood
bank officers, radiation therapist, pathologist, microbiologist, biochemist
and radiologist.
Status of BMT
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Success rate is variable for BMTs in India. Overall
mortality is less than five per cent for all kinds of BMT performed. It
is less than one per cent for autologous BMT and less than 10 per cent
for allogeneic BM transplants
Dr Maheboob Basade, medical oncologist, Jaslok
Hospital, Mumbai
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Though the past decade has seen a dramatic and dynamic expansion
in the clinical discipline of bone marrow and peripheral blood stem cell transplantation,
BMT is still in infancy in India, feel experts. BMT programme in India is still
not developed to tackle the patient overload in the country and from overseas.
According to Dr Lalit Kumar, medical oncologist, All India
Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), lack of awareness among the general or
referring physicians, who refer the patients late, lack of co-ordination among
the various departments in hospitals, where this facility is available and the
cost involved contribute to its slow growth. Increase in efficacy and
safety of this mode of therapy is mainly due to refinements in technologies,
supportive care and due to expansion of scientific knowledge of hematopoiesis
and immunology, adds Dr Shah.
Success and advancement of BMT
Says Dr Maheboob Basade, medical oncologist, Jaslok Hospital,
Success rate is variable for BMTs in India. Overall mortality is less
than five per cent for all kinds of BMT performed. It is less than one per cent
for autologous BMT and less than 10 per cent for allogeneic BM transplants.
It has been observed that the risk to the life due to Graft
versus Host Disease (GVHD) occurs mostly in cases of allogeneic BM transplants.
Experts pinpoint that mortality is more in matched unrelated transplants in
comparison to matched related BM transplants. Results in controlling GVHD
has improved with the advent of newer drugs, effective in better immuno-suppression.
The drugs are effective in selectively discarding T-cells or T-lymphocytes,
which causes GVHD, opines Dr Basade.
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To give boost to BMTs in India, the government need
to urgently set up a common HLA registry for all the hospitals across
the country on payment basis.
Dr T Raja, senior medical
oncologist, Apollo Hospitals, Chennai
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When BM transplantation was initiated for the first time in
1970, BM was used as a source of stem cells. But now almost 60 per cent of allogeneic
transplants and almost 99 per cent of autologous transplants are being done
using peripheral blood stem cells. More than 6000 children and young adults
also underwent transplantation using umbilical cord stem cells with equally
good results, says Dr Kumar.
Advancement in BMT are cord blood transplant, mini transplants
and unrelated registry transplants. Other new developments are use of stem cells
in the treatment of non-malignant diseases such as repair of myocardium and
neurological disorders.
Other major advances in the field of hematopoietic stem cell
transplantation are collection and purification of stem cells so that haplo-identical
(half matched) transplants can be performed. This implies that every patient
can have a donor, as in this case, a parent will be half matched with the child.
Another upcoming area is the use of stem cells for the purpose of gene therapy,
informs Dr Chandy.
The cost
Most hospitals are discouraged to have a BMT unit as the
cost of setting it is very capital intensive and costs around Rs one crore.
The basic requirement to set up a transplant unit is hepa-filtered
positive pressure rooms, facilities for collection, processing and cryo-preserving
stem cells, with a support system in place like HLA lab for tissue matching
through serology or preferably molecular based HLA typing. HLA typing generally
costs Rs 3,000 to Rs 6, 000 per patient. The support system should also comprise
of a bio-chemistry, microbiology and a blood component program.
The HLA typing lab is a capital intensive set up comprising
a thermal cycler costing around Rs four lakh, Gel Documentation System costing
around Rs four Lakh and the cost of the consumables like HLA trays costing around
Rs 5,000 per tray. An electrophoresis instrument costing around Rs 1, 000 is
also required.
The cost of BMT is generally around Rs 6-8 lakh for autologous
and 10-12 lakh for allogeneic transplant. While the expense incurred on the
BMT is estimated in actuals in a centre like TMH, centres like Jaslok Hospital
offer a packaged deal.
The cost of BMT is expensive because of the cost incurred
on the growth factors, for which one requires a cell separator and consumables.
A cell separator, costs around 20 lakh and consumables costs Rs 100 USD per
sitting on an average, depending on the patient, which is the recurrent cost.
Says Dr Harish Ahuja, senior pathologist and blood bank officer,
Jaslok Hospital, Stem cell harvesting contributes around 15 per cent of
the cost for BMT, which also includes the cost of the disposables and consumables
costing around one to Rs 1.5 lakh. A BMT centre can ideally perform 15
to 18 cases a year, if the transplants performed are on a no-profit, no-loss
basis.
One factor impacting the cost is that BMT is not covered
under health insurance. Only a small fraction of BMT cost can be reimbursed
through insurance, says Dr Sastry.
Lack of donors
BMT is also plagued by lack of donors. The chance of finding
a matched related donor in a family is 25 per cent and one in a million for
a matched unrelated donor. The situation becomes grave because of the lack of
a wider donor pool for Indian patients requiring a matched bone marrow not only
in the country but also globally. It is difficult to find a match for
Asians in registries from North America, Europe or Canada because Caucasians
and Asians have a different set of genes, says Dr Kumar.
Some of the major centres performing BMTs
- Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai has performed over 250 BMTs
till date with around 40 BMTs per year. TMH performed the first allogeneic
bone marrow transplant in 1983. TMH performs BMTs for chronic myeloid
leukaemia (CML), hodgkins disease, leukaemia, most acute leukaemias
and certain lymphomas. TMH has performed 37 cases of Myeloma, 12 cases
of thalassaemia major and 90 cases of CML till date.
- Jaslok Hospital, Mumbai has performed around 70 transplants
mostly in leukemia, myeloma, lymphomas and aplastic anemia. Countrys
first and successful transplant for sickle cell disease was performed
at Jaslok Hospital on a young Omani boy three years back.
- Christian Medical College, Vellore has performed 506 allogeneic
bone marrow/stem cell transplants and 109 autologous stem cell transplants
since1986 and currently six allogeneic and three autologous stem cell
transplant are performed every month. Allogeneic transplants have been
done for thalassemia (160), Chronic myeloid leukemia (60), acute leukemia
(60) , aplastic anaemia or a bone marrow failure (54) and many other
conditions including rare genetic immuno-deficiency states. Autologous
transplants are done mainly for acute leukemia, myeloma and lymphoma.The
private mission hospital houses a three-bed stem cell translant unit,
which will be upgraded to a ten-bed transplant unit very soon.
- Apollo Hospitals, Chennai has has done 159 transplants till
date including allogenic, autologous, cord blood and mini transplants.
The commonest transplants were for multiple myeloma, acute myeloid leukemia
and acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Transplants have also been done for
thalassemia, aplastic anemia, and solid tumours. Nearly 75 per cent
patients got discharged well after the transplants and more than 60
per cent are long term survivors.
- ALL INDIA INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL SCIENCES, New Delhi is doing
almost 30 transplants annually. The centre completed 216 transplants
till June 2005 and has the largest series on myeloma and has completed
79 transplants. The centre is currently using BM stem cells for the
repair of myocardium and certain neurological disorders. AIIMS is trying
to evaluate the role of stem cells in the treatment of certain eye diseases.
- Kidwai Memorial Institute of Oncology, Bangalore started the
transplant unit six months back and has performed three cases of myeloma.
- Gujarat Cancer Research Institute, Ahmedabad performs one
to two transplants in a month. The unit was started one year four months
back and 32 patients have undergone BMT/PBSCT. The centre mainly focuses
on conventional fully HLA matched sibling BM transplantation and autologous
BM transplantation mainly in patients with malignancies.
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Why we require bone marrow registry
To address the problem of lack of donors, the formation of
a bone marrow registry is necessary. Having a good HLA typing facility is required
to kick-start a bone marrow registry. Such registries are well developed in
the west, but yet to make a beginning in India. In the absence of an operational
bone marrow registry, TMH is in the preliminary stages of performing haploidentical
HLA typed BM transplant cases.
Suggestions for improvement
A step by step approach is required to set up a BMT centre.
The BMT centre should perform autologous transplants first and then gradually
switch over to allogeneic transplants. Performing autologous transplants first
ensures that the BMT centre grows logistically, opines Dr Sastry.
Experts say that autologous BMT is ideal as comparable to
allogeneic BMT because there are less chances of infections in autologous transplants
and therefore no risk of having GVHD.
According to Dr T Raja, senior consultant medical oncologist
and senior consultant, BMT, Apollo Hospitals, Chennai, In order to give
a boost to allogeneic BMTs, the government needs to urgently set up good centralised
HLA lab for all the hospitals across the country on payment basis. This will
increase the chances of finding suitable donors within the country for many
needy patients. Patients undergoing BMT are also reported to have developed
infections. Says Dr Vinod Raina, professor, medical oncology, AIIMS, We
are losing 10-30 per cent of transplant patients (depending on the type of transplants
performed) and due to infections, many of which are fungal infections. This
mortality due to infections can come down if facilites are improved and hospitals
are made cleaner.
The good news is that supportive care for infections and
management of some of the complications has improved, reducing the risk of mortality
to almost less than two per cent for autologous and less than 10 per cent for
allogeneic transplant, say experts.
Experts suggest more involvement from the government, as
the government has not been of much help in giving this specialty a boost. Most
of the pioneering work is done by the individual institutions in the various
parts of the country, says Dr Raja.
shardulnautiyal@rediffmail.com
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