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Searching for a Match

If you need an allogeneic transplant, the cells you receive will come from someone else. Your doctor will look for a donor who matches your human leukocyte antigens, or HLA, type. These are markers your body uses to know which cells belong in your body and which don't. To look for a donor, your doctor may test your family and look for a marrow donor or cord blood unit.

Your doctor may test your family members because you inherit HLA markers. Each of your siblings who share the same biological parents as you have a 1 in 4 chance of being a full match. However, most patients do not have a close match in their family and need a transplant from someone else or a donated umbilical cord.

The registry of the C.W. Bill Young Cell Transplantation Program, also called the NMDP RegistrySM, is a listing of potential marrow donors and donated cord blood units. The registry is operated under Federal contracts by the NMDPSM. NMDP has agreements with its global partners to provide access to more than 41 million potential marrow donors and more than 803,000 cord blood units within its search system.*

*Updated as of March 4, 2024. Current numbers can be found at World Marrow Donor Association.

Find more information about how your doctor finds a donor.

Learn how patients who need a transplant are being given hope by NMDP.

It can take a few weeks to a few months or more to find a marrow donor or cord blood unit. However, sometimes a suitable marrow donor or cord blood unit cannot be found. If your doctor cannot find a donor for you, they will look at other treatment options.

Sometimes, family and friends want to help by adding more donors to the registry. NMDP can help with donor recruitment efforts.

Host a Donor Drive

Additional resources

Glossary and the participating transplant centers

Glossary 
List of terms to understand some common terms.

Participating Transplant Centers
List of transplant centers that report data about transplants.

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