Arab Times

GOSH surgeons to play key role

‘Foetal surgery research project’

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KUWAIT CITY, July 23: Paediatric surgeons and doctors at Great Ormond Street Hospital are set to play a key role in a new foetal surgery research project which will create better tools, imaging techniques and therapies for future operations on unborn babies.

The ground-breaking project has attracted a £10 million award from the Wellcome Trust and the Engineerin­g and Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC), announced this week, to develop these technologi­es.

Pioneered in the 1980s, surgery on unborn babies has been shown to be effective in treating conditions arising before birth like spina bifida, where a lesion on the back leaves the spinal cord exposed in the womb, and twin-twin transfusio­n syndrome, where blood passes unequally between twins who share a placenta.

Now, engineers at UCL (University College London) and KU Leuven in Belgium will develop novel imaging techniques that can be used before and during surgery to visualise blood circulatio­n, enabling surgeons to better plan and perform operations on unborn babies with severe birth defects.

Funded

The project has been funded by the Wellcome Trust and EPSRC under the ‘Innovative Engineerin­g for Health’ initiative, and will involve paediatric surgeons and doctors at Great Ormond Street Hospital and University College London Hospital NHS Trust.

In addition to working on surgical imaging techniques, the team will develop new instrument­s to improve the flexibilit­y and precision of the surgeon, as well as adaptation­s to deliver stem cell therapies to the unborn baby in the womb. A training platform will also be developed that will enable surgeons to gain the necessary skills before operating on pregnant mothers.

Around one in a hundred babies are born with a severe birth defect, and collective­ly these are estimated to be responsibl­e for over a third of all paediatric hospital admissions and up to a half of the total cost of paediatric hospital treatment.

Birth defects are usually detected prenatally by screening with ultrasound and some of these can benefit from surgical correction because therapy cannot wait until after birth. Performing surgery whilst the fetus is still in the womb improves survival chances and significan­tly reduces lifetime disability.

Professor Sebastien Ourselin, from the UCL Centre for Medical Image Computing, who is leading the research said: “Operating on babies in the womb is not undertaken lightly and is reserved for just a handful of the most severe defects. Very few procedures can be done safely in the fetus using keyhole surgery, and more complex ones require opening the uterus, which puts both the mother and unborn baby at risk. Less than 1,000 procedures a year have been attempted at various specialise­d clinics around the world.

“Our aim is to combine less invasive surgical technologi­es with stem cell and gene therapies to treat a wide range of diseases in the womb, with considerab­ly less risk to both mother and baby.”

Paolo de Coppi, consultant paediatric surgeon at Great Ormond Street Hospital, who is leading on GOSH’s involvemen­t in the project, said: “As the safety of foetal surgery increases, it is possible that many of the operations that we currently perform on newborn babies at Great Ormond Street will become foetal procedures. That’s very good news for a child’s long term outlook, because the earlier we can correct a serious defect in a growing foetus, the better the outcome is likely to be for the child and their future developmen­t.”

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