Western Mail

Spina bifida surgery in womb yields great results

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DOZENS of babies with spina bifida have been spared paralysis by having surgery before they were even born.

NHS England said the intricate surgery, which involves a team of up to 30 medics, has been carried out on about 32 babies in the womb since January 2020.

Spina bifida prevents the spine and spinal cord developing properly and can lead to paralysis, as well as bowel, bladder and kidney problems.

Schoolteac­her Helena Purcell, whose unborn baby was diagnosed with spina bifida, was operated on by the NHS when she was 23 weeks pregnant.

She was originally told that her baby would likely be paralysed and incontinen­t, and would need a shunt in the brain.

Ms Purcell, who had become pregnant after six failed attempts at IVF, gave birth to a baby girl called Mila at University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (UCLH) in March 2021, three months after the surgery.

She said: “I cannot explain the massive difference the service has had for my family. The NHS doctors are heroes in my eyes, and the surgery they did is just mind-blowing.

“If it wasn’t for them then Mila would be paralysed. I am just so grateful that she has had this chance.”

Mila can move her legs, is fully continent and although she still has some fluid on her brain, is so far showing signs of good developmen­t. She is now under the observatio­n of Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust (GOSH).

Operating on babies at between 23 and 26 weeks of pregnancy, instead of after birth, results in a much better outcome for the baby, NHS England said.

NHS England’s medical director Professor Stephen Powis said: “As well as fighting a global pandemic the NHS continues to develop and offer these trailblazi­ng services and continues to be there for patients.”

Specialist­s in London and Belgium have been part of the multidisci­plinary team effort.

The NHS England-commission­ed programme involves teams from UCLH , GOSH and University Hospitals Leuven in Belgium.

GOSH’s lead neurosurge­on at Dominic Thompson described the procedure as “complex, time-sensitive and not without its risks” but added that “the significan­t and lifechangi­ng impact on babies, like Mila, and their families, cannot be overstated”.

Kate Steele, chief executive at Shine, the national charity supporting people with spina bifida and hydrocepha­lus, said: “Shine is delighted that Helena has had such a positive experience of foetal surgery for her baby with spina bifida.

“By commission­ing this excellent service, the NHS has added an option for some parents expecting a child with spina bifida.”

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