Gulf Times

First baby born in France after uterus transplant

-

Ababy has been born following a uterus transplant for the first time ever in France, the hospital treating mother and infant said yesterday.

Such births are extremely rare but not unpreceden­ted, and come after a cutting-edge procedure to transplant a healthy uterus into a woman whose own is damaged or missing.

The baby, a girl weighing 1.845 kilogramme­s (4.059 pounds), was born on Friday, according to the team at the Foch hospital outside Paris.

“Mother and baby are doing well,” Jean-Marc Ayoubi, head of gynaecolog­y, obstetrics and reproducti­ve medicine at the hospital, told AFP.

The 36-year-old mother, whose name was given only as Deborah, was born without a uterus as she suffered from a rare condition known as Rokitansky Syndrome, which affects about one in 4,500 women.

She received a uterus transplant in March 2019 — performed by the same team that delivered the baby — from her own mother, then aged 57.

“We still had to wait a year to be sure that the transplant­ed uterus wouldn’t be rejected,” said Ayoubi.

The first round of lockdown brought a halt to all prenatal non-emergency care in France, but the birth took place without any major complicati­ons.

Deborah was 33 weeks pregnant when she gave birth, the hospital said.

The first ever birth after a uterus transplant was in Sweden in 2014.

It came one year after the transplant surgery in a case that was documented in the medical journal The Lancet.

Doctors in Brazil succeeded in 2017 with a birth by a woman who had received a uterus transplant from a donor who had died.

The mother in that case suffered from the same disorder as Deborah.

“There have been around 20 births globally” after uterus transplant­s, said Ayoubi, who is also a professor of medicine at the University of Versailles-SaintQuent­in-en-Yvelines.

The cases offer hope to women suffering from similar reproducti­ve problems, as an alternativ­e to adoption or surrogacy.

Ayoubi explained that the transplant in Deborah’s case was not intended to be permanent.

The “provisiona­l transplant” as he called it was only meant to allow her to have a child.

However he stressed it was not unheard of for women with transplant­ed uteruses to give birth a second time, as has happened several times in Sweden.

Ayoubi’s team have already received permission to continue their work on women born without uteruses, with clinical trials planned on another 10 women with similar conditions.

 ??  ?? Head of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecolog­y and Reproducti­ve Medicine at the Foch Hospital Jean-Marc Ayoubi poses with his team in Suresnes, west of Paris, yesterday.
Head of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecolog­y and Reproducti­ve Medicine at the Foch Hospital Jean-Marc Ayoubi poses with his team in Suresnes, west of Paris, yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar