Every year, approximately 18,000 patients are diagnosed with life-threatening blood cancers or other diseases like sickle cell for which a blood stem cell transplant from a related or unrelated donor may be their best or only hope of a cure.
A patient is hoping someone like you registers to become a marrow donor.
A bone marrow transplant or umbilical cord blood transplant (also called a BMT) is a potentially life-saving treatment for some patients who have leukemia, lymphoma, or a genetic metabolic or immune system disorder. A bone marrow or cord blood transplant replaces a patient's unhealthy blood-forming cells with healthy cells from a donor.
You could be the one to save a life.
The registry of the C.W. Bill Young Cell Transplantation Program is also called the NMDP RegistrySM. The registry is a listing of potential marrow donors and donated cord blood units.
- The Need for More Marrow Donors—Learn why, despite more than 41 million registered donors and more than 803,000 cord blood units worldwide, more are needed.*
- Donating Marrow—Learn what happens when you are asked to be a donor.
- Donate Cord Blood—Learn about the basics of cord blood donation and the options for donation.
- Cord Blood Units for Research—Find who to contact to acquire cord blood units for pre-clinical or clinical research.
*Updated as of March 4, 2024. Current numbers can be found at the World Marrow Donor Association.
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Join the efforts to save a life
Find locations where you can donate your blood or register to be a marrow or organ donor.