Where You Go for a Stem Cell Transplant
When you need an allogeneic stem cell transplant, you will need to go to a hospital that has a specialized transplant center. The National Marrow Donor Program® maintains a list of transplant centers in the United States that can help you find a transplant center.
Unless you live near a transplant center, you may need to travel from home for your treatment. You might need to stay in the hospital during your transplant, you may be able to have it as an outpatient, or you may need to be in the hospital only part of the time. When you are not in the hospital, you will need to stay in a hotel or apartment nearby. Many transplant centers can assist with finding nearby housing.
How Long It Takes to Have a Stem Cell Transplant
A stem cell transplant can take a few months to complete. The process begins with treatment of high doses of chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or a combination of the two. This treatment goes on for a week or two. Once you have finished, you will have a few days to rest.
Next, you will receive the blood-forming stem cells. The stem cells will be given to you through an IV catheter. This process is like receiving a blood transfusion. It takes 1 to 5 hours to receive all the stem cells.
After receiving the stem cells, you begin the recovery phase. During this time, you wait for the blood cells you received to start making new blood cells.
Even after your blood counts return to normal, it takes much longer for your immune system to fully recover—several months for autologous transplants and 1 to 2 years for allogeneic or syngeneic transplants.
How Stem Cell Transplants May Affect You
Stem cell transplants affect people in different ways. How you feel depends on:
- The type of transplant that you have
- The doses of treatment you had before the transplant
- How you respond to the high-dose treatments
- Your type of cancer
- How advanced your cancer is
- How healthy you were before the transplant
Since people respond to stem cell transplants in different ways, your doctor or nurses cannot know for sure how the procedure will make you feel.
How to Tell If Your Stem Cell Transplant Worked
Doctors will follow the progress of the new blood cells by checking your blood counts often. As the newly transplanted stem cells produce blood cells, your blood counts will go up.