Event JSON
{
"id": "1490411e7b83e136c3daeb791a3796478c172681863993e040e4442c39a58b8c",
"pubkey": "5ebe28a67c81fdc7efe0fcd2f642199086302074c8d2558d28bb6847ec822fd9",
"created_at": 1731497558,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"r",
"https://www.wired.com/story/stem-cell-donation-deceased-ossium-bone-marrow-cancer-leukemia/"
],
[
"subject",
"Bone Marrow Donors Can Be Hard to Find. One Company Is Turning to Cadavers"
],
[
"published_at",
"1731497400"
],
[
"image",
"https://media.wired.com/photos/67069550cb5bb55be44eb19e/master/pass/100924_Stem%20Cell%20Harvesting-1.jpg"
],
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"url https://media.wired.com/photos/67069550cb5bb55be44eb19e/master/pass/100924_Stem%20Cell%20Harvesting-1.jpg"
],
[
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],
[
"summary",
"The patient had been treated for acute myeloid leukemia once before, but the cancer came back. A bone marrow transplant was her best chance at survival. Ossium Health, a San Francisco-based biotech startup, had developed a method to collect bone marrow from recently deceased organ donors, cryopreserve it, and build a bank of frozen bone marrow. The company identified a close match in their bank and shipped the frozen cells to the hospital. The transplant was successful, and the patient has since been discharged from the hospital."
]
],
"content": "nostr:nprofile1qyd8wumn8ghj7ctjw35kxmr9wvhxcctev4erxtnwv4mhxqpqt6lz3fnus87u0mlqlnf0vssejzrrqgr5erf9trfghd5y0myz9lvs7sf4gr\nhttps://media.wired.com/photos/67069550cb5bb55be44eb19e/master/pass/100924_Stem%20Cell%20Harvesting-1.jpg\nSan Francisco–based Ossium Health has carried out three transplants for cancer patients using stem cells from deceased donors’ blood marrow in recent months.\nhttps://www.wired.com/story/stem-cell-donation-deceased-ossium-bone-marrow-cancer-leukemia/",
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}