2001
DOI: 10.1046/j.1537-2995.2001.41050606.x
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Outcomes of a program to evaluate mother and baby 6 months after umbilical cord blood donation

Abstract: These data support the feasibility of a routine 6-month program of evaluating mothers and babies giving cord blood at a cord blood bank. Such programs may increase the quality of components stored for transplantation.

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Cited by 13 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Most of our donors (99.3%) of the stored UCB unit completed the questionnaire; this high prevalence of participation was similar to that for the Milan Cord Blood Bank (94.5%) . They reported that among the 2315 donors there was one congenital urinary malformation, one protein C deficiency, one phenylketonuria, one mucoviscidosis, and one chromosomal abnormality (10q‐) detected by routine follow‐up 6 months after birth .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 62%
“…Most of our donors (99.3%) of the stored UCB unit completed the questionnaire; this high prevalence of participation was similar to that for the Milan Cord Blood Bank (94.5%) . They reported that among the 2315 donors there was one congenital urinary malformation, one protein C deficiency, one phenylketonuria, one mucoviscidosis, and one chromosomal abnormality (10q‐) detected by routine follow‐up 6 months after birth .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 62%
“…A program of active prospective follow-up at 6 months instituted by the Milan CBB identified 5 of 2315 (0.2%) cords that needed to be discarded on the basis of postnatal history, although there were no cases of malignancy. 25 CBBs rely upon the donor's parents to contact the bank should their child develop a medical condition that would make the unit unsuitable for transplantation. However, in one study, almost 25% of women who had provided informed consent for cord blood donation did not know how to contact the CBB.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Obstetrical criteria such as preterm delivery, rupture of membranes >12 h, abnormal foetal development and fever during labour remained exclusion causes for CB collection, except for the occurrence of warning signs of AFD during labour. All CB units in the study were processed for banking according to the CB bank procedure for characterization, cryopreservation, storing (Hubel et al , 2004) and follow up of newborns/donors (Lecchi et al , 2001), with the exclusion of those with Apgar score <6 for more than 5 min and/or with umbilical artery pH <7·20. The CB units collected following clinical and/or laboratory alterations (low Apgar score and metabolic acidaemia) were included in the study, but were not considered eligible for banking.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%