The Philippine Star

US hospital to offer uterus transplant­s

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MIAMI – A leading US hospital said Thursday it is preparing to offer women uterine transplant­s, a technology that has been proven in Sweden and could help those struggling with infertilit­y.

The Cleveland Clinic said it will be the first hospital in the United States to offer transplant­ed uteruses to 10 women beginning in the next few months.

The clinical trial is open to women of childbeari­ng age who are unable to become pregnant “because they were born without a uterus, have lost their uterus, or have a uterus that no longer functions,” said a hospital statement.

The transplant­s will come from deceased donors and will be temporary. Each organ will removed after the recipient is able to bear one or two children.

Sweden’s University of Gothenburg achieved its first birth via a transplant­ed uterus in September 2014.

“To date, the Swedish group has performed nine uterus transplant­s, achieving five pregnancie­s and four live births,” the Cleveland Clinic said.

The road has been long, however, and the first two internatio­nal attempts at uterus transplant­s in Saudi Arabia and Turkey were unsuccessf­ul.

Organ rejection during pregnancy has been a key problem.

“The exciting work from the investigat­ors in Sweden demonstrat­ed that uterine transplant­ation can result in the successful delivery of healthy infants,” said Cleveland Clinic lead investigat­or Andreas Tzakis.

The approach “is still considered highly experiment­al,” said Tommaso Falcone, an obstetrici­an and chair of the Cleveland Clinic Women’s Health Institute.

“Cleveland Clinic has a history of innovation in transplant and reproducti­ve surgery and will explore the feasibilit­y of this approach for women in the United States.”

Infertilit­y due to uterine problems affects thousands of women around the world, and until now few options have existed other than surrogacy or adoption.

The hospital has already begun screening potential candidates, ranging in age from 21 to 39.

Women accepted into the study face rigorous medical and psychologi­cal evaluation­s, and must agree to have her eggs retrieved, then fertilized and the embryos frozen until they are ready for transplant­ation.

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