MILWAUKEE -- Doctors seem to have found a way to make bone marrow transplants safer and more effective against blood cancers like leukemia, an achievement that offers new hope for people over 50 in particular.
The advance by Stanford University doctors could make such transplants, which have dramatically improved cancer survival among children and young adults, more widely available to older people who typically don't fare as well. It also brings the field closer to reaching its long-sought goal: training a recipient's body to accept tissue from another person and live a ''blended" life without heavy reliance on anti-rejection drugs.