International blood and marrow transplant and cell therapy registry

A Data Resource for Blood and Marrow Transplants and Adoptive Cellular Therapy Research

['FUNDING_OTHER'] · MEDICAL COLLEGE OF WISCONSIN · NIH-11309227

Collects and links medical records, patient surveys, and stored samples from people who had blood or marrow transplants or adoptive cell therapies to help improve future care.

Quick facts

Phase['FUNDING_OTHER']
Study typeNih_funding
SexAll
SponsorMEDICAL COLLEGE OF WISCONSIN (nih funded)
Locations1 site (MILWAUKEE, UNITED STATES)
Trial IDNIH-11309227 on ClinicalTrials.gov

What this research studies

This project runs a large international registry that gathers outcomes from more than 625,000 people who have had hematopoietic cell transplants or adoptive cellular therapies. It links your clinical records with stored blood or tissue samples and with patient-reported outcome surveys about quality of life and late effects. Researchers worldwide can request de-identified data and biospecimens to study safety, long-term side effects, and ways to improve treatments and aftercare. If your treating center participates, you may be asked to allow your data to be included, complete surveys, or donate specimens that help answer these questions.

Who could benefit from this research

Good fit: People who have received—or are planning to receive—blood or bone marrow transplants or adoptive cellular therapies for cancer or other blood disorders are the best candidates to participate.

Not a fit: People without a history of transplant or cell therapy, or with health issues unrelated to blood or marrow disorders, are unlikely to be eligible or see direct benefits from this registry.

Why it matters

Potential benefit: Could help doctors identify safer, more effective transplant and cell therapy approaches and improve long-term follow-up and survivorship care.

How similar studies have performed: Yes—CIBMTR has supported thousands of studies and over 1,700 publications, making this a well-established and productive resource for improving transplant care.

Where this research is happening

MILWAUKEE, UNITED STATES

Researchers

About this research

  1. This is an active NIH-funded research project — typically early-stage science, not a clinical trial accepting patient enrollment.
  2. Some NIH-funded labs run parallel clinical studies or seek volunteers for related work. To check, contact the principal investigator or institution listed above.
  3. For full project details, budget, and progress reports, visit the official NIH RePORTER page below.

View on NIH RePORTER →

Conditions: Blood Diseases

Last reviewed 2026-05-15 by the Find a Trial editorial team. Information on this page is for educational purposes and is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals about clinical trial participation.