The Minneapolis organization that arranges life-saving blood and bone marrow donations for thousands of transplant recipients across the U.S. is changing its name because promising research is making its old identity irrelevant.
The name "Be The Match" reflected the goal to perfectly match donors and recipients by key genetic characteristics to improve the odds of transplants for cancers such as leukemia and blood disorders such as sickle cell disease. However, the name could create confusion in a future when a perfect match isn't needed, said Erica Jensen, the agency's senior vice president.
"The 'The' was capitalized, as in 'The Match,'" she said. "Instead of us looking at finding people 'The Match', we are now trying to help as many patients as possible find their best match."
More research is needed to establish the safety and effectiveness of imperfect matches, but the early findings are so strong that the organization didn't want to wait. Be The Match officially became NMDP on Monday — with new signs adorning the nonprofit agency's offices in the North Loop.
NMDP is based on the organization's original name, the National Marrow Donor Program, which was replaced by Be The Match a decade ago to increase attention to its donor registry.
The organization has increased its U.S. registry since that time to 7 million potential donors, and it provided cellular therapies to a record 7,435 patients in 2023.
But it has encountered some brand-identity problems along the way. As many as 30% of people in focus groups thought Be The Match was a dating service.
Hope for imperfect matches
The matching of unrelated donors and recipients is commonly based on eight genetic markers of human leukocyte antigens (or HLAs), the proteins that tell the body's immune system which cells are safe. An eight-of-eight match has long been the standard, because it reduces the threat of graft vs. host disease, which occurs when donor cells don't recognize the recipient's cells and attack them.