Publications by authors named "Marta Torrabadella"

Background: Umbilical cord blood (UCB) donation is becoming inefficient and we recently proposed the estimated fetal weight percentile (EFWp) ≥60th as a predictor for a prenatal selection of donors. The aim of this study is to prospectively validate this and to identify new potential prenatal predictive parameters.

Study Design And Methods: Prospective cohort study of low-risk pregnancies undergoing third trimester ultrasound, whose UCB was collected at delivery (2016-2018) and compared with a historical cohort (2013-2016, N = 869).

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Background: The need for high-cellular-content cord blood units (CBUs) for allogenic transplantation is evident to improve clinical outcomes. In our environment and with current donation programs, very few collected units meet suggested clinical thresholds, making collection programs highly inefficient. To increase the clinical conversion rate, we have assessed factors influencing the cellular content of the cord blood collection and established the estimated fetal weight percentile (EFWp) as a tool to predict which deliveries will obtain higher cellular counts.

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Related donors for hematopoietic cell (HC) transplantation are a growing population in recent years because of expanding indications for allogeneic transplantation. The safety and welfare of the donor are major concerns for the transplantation community, especially for related sibling donors of young recipients who are children and, thus, not able to fully consent. Because donation of HC does not improve the donor's own physical health and carries a risk of side effects, careful assessment of medical risks specific to the individual donor, as well as consideration of ethical and legal aspects associated with donation from a child, must be considered.

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Notch signals are critical for T-cell development, limiting the differentiation potential of multipotent progenitors arriving in the thymus via the bloodstream. Notch ligands Delta-like and Jagged are expressed in the bone marrow and, consequently, a role in the regulation of early events of adult hematopoiesis has been proposed. However, mice with disruptions in the Notch pathway do not show gross defects in the hematopoietic stem cell compartment, limiting Notch effects at later stages of development.

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Background: This study explores pregnant women's awareness of cord blood stem cells and their attitude regarding banking options in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the UK.

Study Design And Methods: Questionnaires were distributed in six maternities. This anonymous and self-completed questionnaire included 29 multiple-choice questions based on: 1) sociodemographic factors, 2) awareness and access to information about cord blood banking, 3) banking option preferences, and 4) donating cord blood units (CBUs) to research.

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Background And Objective: Multiple sclerosis (MS) has been consistently associated with the HLA-DR2 haplotype and particularly with the HLA-DRB1*15 allele. Epistatic interactions between both parental alleles in the DRB1 loci have been shown to modify the MS susceptibility risk. This study investigated the frequencies of various HLA-DRB1 genotypes, their impact on MS susceptibility and their correlation with the clinical severity in a Spanish population.

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We analyzed factors predicting CD34(+) cell mobilization and collection after granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) administration in 47 healthy donors. Basal CD34(+) cell count and sex were the two variables that significantly predicted a better CD34(+) cell mobilization, and greater age was the only variable associated with lower CD34+ cell yields.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study looked at why some patients didn't get stem cell transplants, even though they were referred for it.
  • Out of 129 patients, 37 (about 29%) didn’t have the transplant due to reasons like their disease getting worse or changes in treatment plans.
  • Most patients in the study were around 46 years old, and the researchers found that age and disease status were key differences between those who got the transplant and those who didn’t.
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Background And Objectives: Although chemotherapy in childhood acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has improved in the last decade, except for a group of better-risk patients (approximately one third), more than half the other patients relapse. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the results obtained with bone marrow transplants, either allogeneic (allo-BMT) or autologous (auto-BMT), following two intensive consolidation courses in a series of children with high-risk (HR) AML according to morphologic and early-response BFM criteria. A second objective was to compare the results of auto-BMT with those of allo-BMT.

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