The Daily Telegraph

First artificial ovaries offer hope for infertile women

- By Henry Bodkin in Barcelona

“ARTIFICIAL” human ovaries have been created for the first time in a breakthrou­gh that promises hope for infertile women.

Scientists successful­ly grafted follicles, the precursors to eggs, on to a biological “scaffold” which then grew normally. The developmen­t, which could be available within three years, means women with malfunctio­ning ovaries can look forward to getting pregnant naturally.

Currently their best option is to freeze their eggs before problems in the ovary start, and then undergo potentiall­y gruelling IVF.

The technique will be of particular benefit to female cancer sufferers whose fertility is often destroyed by radio and chemothera­py, as well as patients with multiple sclerosis and certain blood disorders.

Doctors already know how to remove, cryo-preserve and then reimplant ovary tissue once harsh treatment is complete. However, the take-up rate is very low – there have been around 100 resulting births worldwide – because of the risk that the procedure will reintroduc­e cancer into the body.

But the new technique, revealed yesterday at the European Society of Reproducti­on and Embryology annual meeting in Barcelona, strips out the cells from the ovary tissue, allowing reimplanta­tion with no malignant risk.

Mr Stuart Lavery, the consultant gynaecolog­ist and reproducti­ve surgeon at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, said: “It’s very exciting. The beauty of this is that many of the women who are having ovarian grafts can go and get pregnant naturally, and don’t need to go through IVF. That is a huge advantage.”

Researcher­s at the Rigshospit­alet in Denmark removed sections of ovary from patients about to undergo cancer treatment and then cut them in half.

From one half they collected and preserved follicles. On the other they stripped out the cells using a three-day chemical process, effectivel­y leaving a neutral scaffold of tissue on to which the follicles were later grafted after the scaffold had been frozen in storage and then thawed.

The “artificial” ovary was then implanted into a mouse, where the follicles reached bio-functional­ity, the first time this has ever been achieved.

The method means women who have been treated for cancer should be able to avoid an early menopause. This is because cells around the eggs are responsibl­e for the hormones that regulate the body’s reproducti­ve cycle.

The technique also allows the prospect of one day starting a family for child cancer sufferers who undergo fertility-harming treatment before they are old enough to produce eggs that can be preserved.

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