Artificial womb offers promise for preemies
Researchers are creating an artificial womb to improve care for extremely premature babies
and remarkable animal — testing suggests the first-of-its-kind watery incubation so closely mimics mom that it just might work.
Today, premature infants weighing as little as a pound are hooked to ventilators and other machines inside incubators.
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia is aiming for a gentler solution, to give the tiniest preemies a few more weeks cocooned in a womb- like environment — treating them more like fetuses than newborns in hopes of giving them a better chance of healthy survival.
The researchers created a fluid-filled transparent container to simulate how fetuses float in amniotic fluid inside mom’s uterus, and attached it to a mechanical placenta that keeps blood oxygenated.
In early-stage animal test- ing, extremely premature lambs grew, apparently nor- mally, inside the system for three to four weeks, the team reported Tuesday.
“We start with a tiny fetus that is pretty inert and spends most of its time sleeping. Over four weeks we see that fetus open its eyes, grow wool, breathe, swim,” said Dr. Emily Partridge, a CHOP research fellow and first author of the study published in Nature Communications.
“It’s hard to describe actu- ally how uniquely awe-inspir- ing it is to see,” she added in an interview.
Human testing still is three to five years away, although the team already is in dis- cussions with the Food and Drug Administration.
“We’re trying to extend normal gestation,” said Dr. Alan Flake, a fetal surgeon at CHOP who is leading the project and considers it a temporary bridge between the mother’s womb and the outside world.
Increasingly hospitals attempt to save the most critically premature infants, those born before 26 weeks gestation and even those right at the limits of viabil- ity — 22 to 23 weeks.
Extreme prematurity is a leading cause of infant mortality, and those who do survive frequently have seri- ous disabilities such as cerebral palsy.
The idea of treating preemies in fluid-filled incubators may sound strange, but phys- iologically it makes sense, said Dr. Catherine Spong, a fetal medicine specialist at the National Institutes of Health.
“This is really an innova- tive, promising first step,” said Spong, who wasn’t involved with the research.
One of the biggest risks for very young preemies is that their lungs aren’t ready to breathe air, she explained. Before birth, amniotic fluid flows into their lungs, bringing in growth factors crucial for proper lung development.
\When they’re born too soon, doctors hook preemies to ventilators to keep them alive but risking lifelong lung damage.
Flake’s goal is for the womb-like system to support the very youngest preemies just for a few weeks, until their organs are mature enough to better handle regular hospital care like older preemies who have less risk of death or disability.
The device is simpler than previous attempts at creating an artificial womb, which haven’t yet panned out.
Flake stressed that the womb-like system isn’t intended to support preemies any younger than today’s limits of viability — not what he calls the more “sensationalistic” idea of artificially growing embryos.