Before receiving allogeneic transplants--the most common type--patients with blood cancers must undergo a conditioning regimen of high-dose chemotherapy or radiation to kill any resident cancer cells, suppress the patient's immune system, and leave a disease-free environment into which healthy new blood stem cells can be infused. Known as myeloablation, the regimen prepares the patient to accept a "non-self" graft without triggering a severe attack on the patient by the transplant (graft vs. host disease).
![Preparing Patients for Myeloablative Allogeneic Transplants](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20090510225912im_/http://www.cancer.gov/images/Documents/84790913-8189-4760-83de-6fbad2a812ed/slide19.jpg)
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