Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) offers hope and a critical step forward for patients on the tumultuous journey of cancer treatment. With this intervention, a patient typically receives a donor's blood-forming stem cells to repopulate their ablated bone marrow with the goal of cancer remission. This therapy was first harnessed in clinical practice with E. Donnall Thomas' pioneering trial in 1957. Since the 1980s, HSCT has become a standard practice within oncology as a necessary adjunct to chemotherapy, especially in high-risk, relapsed cancer. In the US, the 5-year survival rate for patients with acute and chronic leukemia receiving therapy is 67% with multiple factors impacting survival including cancer type, age at diagnosis, and medical comorbidities. 1 Without treatment, acute leukemia is fatal within months of diagnosis, but relapse-free survival in adult patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is 33% for those receiving chemotherapy only in comparison with 52% for those also receiving HSCT. 2 Although outcomes vary for all patients impacted by hematologic cancers, one fact is clear: access to HSCT is necessary for prolonged survival.Hahn et al 3 have published a new retrospective cohort study examining the implementation of HSCT on varying patient populations who underwent transplant between 2009 and 2018. More than 130 000 transplants were evaluated in patients from childhood to late adulthood. In this 9-year period, utilization of HSCT was shown to increase for people with all diseases and of all ages, races, and ethnicities. Utilization in their study was calculated as the ratio of transplantations to cancer cases. Excitingly, although the rate of implementation for Hispanic patients was less than that of non-Hispanic White patients at the earliest time points in their analysis, by 2018, utilization by Hispanic patients exceeded that by non-Hispanic White patients in the treatment of acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL) and was nearly equal in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). This finding is quite hopeful because despite the many barriers Hispanic patients face when gaining excellent care, which include but are not limited to equitable health insurance access 4 and for some, language barriers, these findings 3 suggest that it is possible for those hurdles to be overcome.Nonetheless, there is still work to do as Hispanic patients still have lower rates of HSCT for AML and NHL at all ages. Disappointingly, while HSCT utilization in Hispanic patients improved over time in many domains, utilization for Black patients with hematologic cancers lags behind non-Hispanic White and Hispanic patients in all diseases with the exception of HL in children and young adults.These findings are exacerbated as these patient populations age. Digesting these findings from Hahn et al 3 necessitates a consideration of the age distribution in the US by race and ethnicity. Although the nation's population is aging with a slowing birth rate, both Hispanic and Black populations were the largest prop...