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How manny babbies are actually cured with stem cell banking ?

How many babies are actually “cured” by stem cell banking is a bit of a misleading question: most banked stem cells are never used , and the number of children personally cured by their own stored cells is very small. Public-facing claims often blur together future potential, experimental uses, and real transplant outcomes, while reviews and reporting note low utilization rates and concerns about overhyped advertising.

What the evidence suggests

Cord blood and related stem cell storage are most established for certain blood and immune disorders, especially when cells are used in transplants for a sibling or another compatible patient. One promotional source says there have been more than 45,000 cord-blood transplant patients and more than 25,000 cures, but that figure refers to all treated patients, not babies whose own banking later cured them. That means the true “babies cured by banking” number is far smaller than marketing language often implies.

Why the number is low

  • A child usually cannot use their own stored cord blood for many inherited diseases, because the stored cells may carry the same genetic problem.
  • Many stem-cell uses are still experimental, not routine cures.
  • A lot of banked samples are kept “just in case” and never needed.
  • Public banking is used more often than private banking for actual transplants in many settings, because matched units can help other patients.

Practical takeaway

If you mean private baby stem cell banking , the honest answer is: very few children are ever “cured” by it, and no single widely accepted number is available that cleanly counts those cases. If you mean all cord-blood stem cell transplants , the field has helped many patients, but that is different from saying banking itself routinely cures babies.

TL;DR

Stem cell banking is more like a possible backup than a proven cure for most children. The real-world cure count for babies who bank their own cells appears to be very small , while the broader transplant field has helped many patients overall.