Twitter
Advertisement

Bangalore biotech firms persuade parents to bank cord blood

Cashing in on a high birth rate and the enormous potential of stem cell research, biotechnology firms are coaxing more parents to bank blood from their newborn’s umbilical cord.

Latest News
article-main
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

BANGALORE: Cashing in on a high birth rate and the enormous potential of stem cell research, biotechnology firms are coaxing more parents to bank blood from their newborn’s umbilical cord.

Bondita Bhattacharya, 39, who is married to a software engineer, is among more than 4,000 parents who have had the blood cells from their children frozen, to be revived if and when there is a scientific breakthrough.

Bhattacharya, whose baby was born last month, said she had paid 60,000 rupees for the process as she had “nothing to lose”.

“It is like taking an insurance policy. It is safe,” she said on Tuesday. “In the future I am sure there will be a breakthrough in stem cell research. They (scientists) may come out with a cure for diabetes or cancer. I will regret if I am not able to take advantage of that.”

Stem cells are master cells from which the body’s immune and blood system originate and which can develop into cells of any organ.

Blood which is extracted from the baby’s umbilical cord and placenta discarded after birth are loaded with stem cells, according to doctor Nalini Krishnan, medical advisor of LifeCell, a firm which deals in preserving cord blood. These cells can help cure more than 75 serious ailments, she says.

“Collecting and preserving the baby’s cord blood stem cells is a security blanket for your baby and immediate family members. It is effective in the treatment of leukemia, anaemia, inherited disorders and several other deficiencies of the immune system,” Krishnan says.

“Lifestyle diseases such as diabetes, liver disorders and heart ailments can also be treated with stem cells,” she adds.

The two Indian companies which offer cord blood cell banking—LifeCell and Reliance Life Sciences—have a combined repository of more than 4,000 units, with Reliance dominating with 3,000 units.

“Our target is to get to 15,000 units by the end of next year and grow our presence from the current six cities to 25,” says Abhay Kumar, chief executive of LifeCell, which has a collaboration with Cyro-Cell International of the United States.

“We will be opening two banking centres outside India during the next year and (expect to) clock 10 billion rupees within the next five years,” Kumar said. LifeCell was set up a year ago.

“The opportunity is big as there are 26 million births in India every year.”
Prasad Mangipudi, marketing vice-president of LifeCell says the company followed “ethical standards” despite controversies surrounding the stem cell research.

In December, South Korean investigators said that the apparent landmark stem cell research by cloning expert Hwang Woo-Suk had been faked, turning the one-time national hero into a disgraced fabricator.

Roopa Devi, 26, a doctor, who banked her son’s cord blood cells at LifeCell’s facility in southern city of Chennai a month ago, is not worried by the controversy. Banking blood, she says, is the “best gift” a parent can give to their children.

“In today’s world everybody needs a little bit of help to sail through life. Why should my son be denied that?” asks Devi. “I do not want to shut any options for my son. I know at present the research is shrouded in a bit of controversy. But you never know what will happen in the future.”

Doctors harvest the cells once the umbilical cord is clamped and cut, using a ‘collection kit’ supplied by one of the two companies. The blood is then packaged in a special shipping material provided in the kit.

Company officials then ship the package to their laboratory, where the stem cells are processed and tested for infectious diseases such as hepatitis, HIV and malaria.

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement