Every year, ~18k people ages 0-74 in the US discover they need a bone marrow transplant.
And while 30% of patients have a relative who is a match, 70% — ~12k people — need to use bone marrow from an unrelated donor.
That process can be especially hard for those who are racially or ethnically diverse, with Black and African American patients having just 29% odds of finding a full match.
Now, San Francisco-based startup Ossium Health is trying to fix the problem, per Wired.
The company’s goal is to make a bone marrow bank, where patients in need of a time-sensitive transplant can get an “off-the-shelf” treatment.
So far, Ossium has processed the bone marrow of thousands of donors, which it’s used to treat three cancer patients, with a fourth transplant scheduled soon.
… most patients must rely on volunteer donors to find a match — or close to it.
But, hopefully soon, some patients will have the option to source perfectly matched marrow directly from Ossium’s bank.
To test its process, the company partnered with the National Marrow Donor Program on an early-stage clinical trial for patients with blood cancer.
And it’s all in the name of a lofty goal: Ossium hopes to up the percentage of patients receiving transplants to 95% in the next 10 years.