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Primary Location:

Secondary Location:

Stanford Hospital and Clinics

Blood and Marrow Transplant Program
300 Pasteur Drive
Room H-0101, MC 5623
Stanford, CA 94305-5290
Direct phone: (650) 723-0822
http://bmt.stanford.edu

Lucile Packard Children's Hospital

1000 Welch Road
Suite 301
Palo Alto, CA 94304
http://www.lpch.org

Program Description:

Since the program's inception in 1986, over 5,650 patients have received transplants for malignant and non-malignant diseases including lymphoma, myeloma, leukemia, MDS and selected solid tumors. Our nationally recognized program combines superior patient care with cutting-edge technology.

Contact Information:

If you have transplant-related questions, please contact Nancy Mason, transplant center coordinator, at (650) 723-7979 or by e-mail at nmason@stanfordmed.org.

Program Type:

Adult and Pediatric

Attending Physicians:

(Medical Doctors)

Adult -

Sally Arai, Jonathan Benjamin, Laura J. Johnston, Ginna G. Laport, Robert Lowsky, David Miklos, Robert S. Negrin, Judith A. Shizuru, Wen-Kai Weng

Pediatric -

Rajni Agarwal, Mike Amylon, Sandhya Kharbanda, Matt Porteus, Kenneth Weinberg, Jennifer Willert

Transplants Performed:

Marrow/PBSC, single cord, and double cord

Cord blood transplants performed on:

Pediatric only

helpExplain Transplant Center HLA Match Requirements

Estimated Search & Transplant Costs

The costs for a transplant vary greatly from center to center and depend on factors such as health insurance, disease type and disease stage of the patient, as well as center-specific billing policies. Examples of costs in the search and transplant include:

  • The amount and geographic location of donors tested
  • Testing needed to confirm a match
  • Processing and collecting of tissue-typing samples
  • Donor workup testing needed
  • Getting the marrow, PBSC or cord blood unit for transplant

For the best understanding of costs of transplant and follow-up for a specific transplant center, contact the center's Financial Representative.

helpExplain Transplant Costs at Different Centers

Financial Services:


Financial services at this center could include:
  • Health insurance information
  • Financial assistance
  • Patient-related resources

Resources for financial information


If you have questions about costs and financial services at this transplant center, you can contact the center's financial representative, Gary Goldstein by e-mail at ggoldstein@stanfordmed.org or by phone at (650) 498-6336.

Many organizations exist to help patients with lodging, transportation and other transplant-related expenses. Visit the National Marrow Donor Program's Patient Organizations database for more information. Financial assistance resources are also listed on this Web site.

Transplant Experience

This center has been performing allogeneic transplants since 1986 and has been an NMDP transplant center since November 1989.

Transplants Reported

(From Jan. 2010 to Dec. 2011
as reported by the centers
)

      Unrelated or Related Donor

Auto-
logous

(PBSC or marrow)

Total

(by transplant type)

Total Non-
Myeloablative transplants*

Marrow

PBSC

Cord
Blood

Unrelated Donor - Adult 20 115 2 --- 137 88
Unrelated Donor - Pediatric 13 0 14 --- 27 1
Related Donor - Adult 11 131 0 --- 142 73
Related Donor - Pediatric 13 0 3 --- 16 1
Autologous - Adult --- --- --- 316 316 ---
Autologous - Pediatric --- --- --- 14 14 ---
Total (by cell source) 57 246 19 330 652 163

*The total Non-Myeloablative transplants column shows a subset of the total number of transplants by type.

To locate centers that perform cord blood transplants, use the search tool on this site.

The NMDP also has Transplants by Disease Charts available showing the number of NMDP coordinated transplants by disease category at each U.S. transplant center.

helpExplain Transplant Experience

Center-Specific Analysis

This analysis includes ONLY patients who received their FIRST ALLOGENEIC* transplant between January 1, 2008 and December 31, 2010 using unrelated or related donors, and who had at least a 100-day follow-up.

  1. This center reported survival status data for 382 patients.
  2. The actual one-year survival of these patients is 70%.
  3. Based on a national average for patients like those transplanted at this center, 95% of the time the one-year survival is expected to be between 66% and 75% for patients at this center.
  4. This center's actual results are similar to the expected range for this center.

*Allogeneic means using cells from a person other than the patient.

For help with understanding these statistics, please see Understanding Transplant Outcomes (PDF).

Survival by Patient's Age, Disease Type and Stage

If you do not find your disease in the statistics below, it may be combined with other similar diseases in a category. Please refer to our broad disease categories page for more information.

Additional Information
Further information about this center, including the number and type of transplants performed in each of the last three years, and the support groups offered, may be found in the BMT InfoNet Transplant Center Directory: http://www.bmtinfonet.org/transplantcenters.

BMT InfoNet (Blood & Marrow Transplant Information Network) is a nonprofit organization that provides information and emotional support to transplant patients and their families.

Please take a brief survey to share your feedback on the transplant center informational listings.