Subscribe to the BioNews newsletter for free

Login
Advanced Search

Search for
BioNews


Printer Friendly Page Follow BioNews on Twitter BioNews RSS feed

 

Login




News


Uterus transplants on the horizon

03 July 2003

By BioNews

Appeared in BioNews 215

BioNews reporting from ESHRE conference, Madrid:
Scientists from the Sahlgrenska Academy at Goteborg University in Sweden have announced that they have successfully achieved births from mice that had undergone uterus transplants. The research was reported at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) annual conference in Madrid, Spain, and follows an earlier report of successful pregnancies in mice in August 2002. The researchers hope that the technique may be able to be developed for use in humans, for example in women who are born without a uterus or who have had it surgically removed after cancer, infection or emergency operations. They believe that it would have advantages over adoption or surrogacy, the only ways a woman without a uterus could currently have a child, because 'with transplantation, the mother will be the social mother, the gestational mother and the genetic mother'.

Dr Mats Brannstrom and his colleagues transplanted uteruses into 12 mice that were 99 per cent genetically identical to the donors, placing them alongside their existing uteruses in order to compare them. Later, up to six embryos were implanted into each uterus. According to the research team, the number of pregnancies achieved in the transplanted uteruses was comparable to that which would be achieved normally, and the mice that were born from the transplants developed as well as any other mice, some of them going on to mate and have pups naturally. 'These are the first true uterus transplants to produce live births', Dr Brannstrom said.

Further uteruses were transplanted into other mice that were not genetically matched, but these were rejected after a week. Dr Brannstrom suggested that, if the technique is to be used in humans, the risk of rejection could be minimised by transplanting uteruses from close family members, although immunosuppressant drugs would still need to be taken. But, following further research on mice and pigs, Dr Brannstrom said that research will begin in humans. 'We hope to do this in two to three years', he said.

 

SOURCES & REFERENCES
Mice born from transplanted womb
Nature | 02 July 2003
 
The Guardian | 02 July 2003
 
Womb transplants closer after breakthrough
The Times | 01 July 2003
 
Womb transplants for women 'three years away'
New Scientist | 01 July 2003
 

RELATED ARTICLES FROM THE BIONEWS ARCHIVE

22 January 2007 - by Antony Blackburn-Starza 
Doctors based at the New York Downtown Hospital, have been given the go-ahead to begin screening women to undergo the first womb transplant in the US. The procedure will involve the removal and transferral of a uterus from a dead donor to a female recipient. After waiting...[Read More]
12 November 2006 - by Heidi Nicholl 
A surgeon in New York has been given the go-ahead to carry out a womb transplant. The procedure has been tried once before in humans in Saudi Arabia in 2000, but the organ had to be removed after 100 days when a blood clot formed in the...[Read More]
26 June 2006 - by Dr Jess Buxton 
BioNews reporting from ESHRE conference, Prague (sponsored by Planer cryoTechnology). By Dr Jess Buxton: Swedish scientists have successfully transplanted uteruses in sheep, an achievement that paves the way for women who do not have a womb to bear their own children. The team, based at the Sahlgrenska Academy at Goteborg...[Read More]

HAVE YOUR SAY
Be the first to have your say.

You need to Login or Register to add comments.

By posting a comment you agree to abide by the BioNews terms and conditions

 


 

- click here to enquire about using this story.


submit to reddit
Delicious delicious
Facebook

Share on Tumblr


Printer Friendly Page


BioNews Appeal: Please donate HERE to keep BioNews independent and FREE to read


The Progress Educational Trust has been shortlisted for the Charity Times Awards 2011

Good Fundraising Code


Advertise your products and services HERE - click for further details