Most often you will get stem cells from a donor. You might use your own stem cells for transplant. Or you might get stem cells from cord blood. These are three very different ways to collect stem cells.
From blood
This is the most common source of stem cells for a transplant. The stem cells are taken out of your donor's blood or your blood.
You or your donor are given shots of a growth factor medicine for several days. This forces bone marrow to make a lot of stem cells. Blood tests are done to check the number of stem cells in the blood before collection starts.
The process for collecting the stem cells from the blood is called apheresis. A thin, flexible tube (catheter) is used to take blood out of a vein. A thin tube carries the blood into an apheresis machine. It separates and saves the stem cells. The rest of the blood goes back into you or the donor. The stem cells that were removed are then frozen until they're needed.
This process may need to be done more than once to collect enough cells. It takes about 2 to 4 hours each time.
From bone marrow
Stem cells may also be taken right out of the bone marrow. This is done in an operating room. You or your donor get medicines to make you sleep and not feel pain (called general anesthesia). A thick, hollow needle is put through the skin, through the bone and into the bone marrow. This is done in the back of the pelvic or hip bone, so you are face down on the table. Suction is used to pull out about 2 pints of thick, spongy bone marrow. It takes an hour or two. (This process is like getting a bone marrow biopsy, but takes longer and more marrow is removed.)
Hip soreness, aching, and bruising is common and may last for a few days. The donor's bone marrow recovers to normal levels in 4 to 6 weeks.
The removed bone marrow is filtered, and the stem cells are taken out of it. They may be frozen until they are needed. Or the donation might be timed so that they go right to the person who needs them.
From cord blood
This type of transplant has been done for more than 30 years. Parents make the decision to donate cord blood instead of throwing it away. Then, after the baby is born, the blood is collected from the umbilical cord and placenta. This has no effect on the baby or birthing parent.
The umbilical cord and placenta blood naturally contains a lot of stem cells. They're collected and frozen. They're then saved at public cord blood banks until someone needs them.