The Daily Telegraph

Human eggs grown in lab for the first time

- By Henry Bodkin

HUMAN eggs have been grown from scratch in a lab in a “breakthrou­gh” that promises hope for infertile women.

British scientists removed egg cells from ovary tissue at their earliest stage of developmen­t and grew them to the point at which they were ready for fertilisat­ion.

Once developed, the pioneering technique should transform the ease with which women can undergo IVF by simply requiring a small tissue biopsy rather than traumatic rounds of hormone-triggered ovulation.

It also promises to preserve the fertility of women undergoing aggressive cancer treatment, many of whom are currently left barren if they are unable to freeze their eggs. Scientists had previously developed mouse eggs to produce live offspring, however it has taken two decades to overcome the challenges presented by replicatin­g the process on humans.

Last night Professor Evelyn Telfer, who led the research at Edinburgh University, told The Daily Telegraph the successful study represente­d a “significan­t step forward”.

Her team will next seek to perfect the process before seeking legal permission from the Human Fertilisat­ion and Embryology Authority to attempt to fertilise the lab-grown eggs.

“Being able to fully develop human eggs in the lab could widen the scope of available fertility treatments,” she said.

“We are now working on optimising the conditions that support egg developmen­t in this way and studying how healthy they are.”

About 84 per cent of couples conceive naturally within a year, according to the NHS, but around one in seven have difficulty, affecting approximat­ely 3.5million people in the UK.

Professor Daniel Brison, of the department of reproducti­on at the University of Manchester, said: “This is an exciting breakthrou­gh … this could pave the way for fertility preservati­on in women and girls with a wider variety of cancers than is possible using existing methods.”

The study, carried out by the Royal Infirmary Edinburgh, the Centre for Human Reproducti­on in New York and the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh, was supported by the Medical Research Council.

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