Daily Mail

Womb ops that mean men ‘could get pregnant tomorrow’

- From Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent in Texas

MEN could become pregnant ‘ tomorrow’ thanks to advances in womb transplant­ation, according to a leading fertility expert.

The success of womb transplant­s into women has paved the way for a similar operation being carried out on people born male.

Dr Richard Paulson said that now wombs have been successful­ly transplant­ed into women born without them, ‘trans women’ – people born biological­ly male but who have had sex change surgery – will also want a womb transplant.

This would allow them to carry a baby – and there was no scientific reason why it would not happen, he added.

In recent months, there have been reports of ‘trans men’ having babies – women who have had sex change operations to become male, but still have functionin­g wombs.

Dr Paulson, president of the American Society for Reproducti­ve Medicine, made his controvers­ial prediction at the society’s annual meeting in San Antonio, Texas.

When asked whether men having babies was ‘pie in the sky’, he said: ‘You are talking about trans women. Someone who started out as a man, who became a woman.

‘There would be additional challenges, but I don’t see any obvious problem that would preclude it. I think it would be possible.’

Asked when someone who was born male could be fitted with a uterus, Dr Paulson said: ‘They could do it tomorrow.’

He added, however: ‘It’s still a very complicate­d procedure. It’s a huge team, it’s not something somebody can do in a community hospital and just get it done.’

Dr Paulson explained that one problem is that the male pelvis would not allow a baby to pass through it because it is too narrow, so a man would have to give birth by caesarean section.

But there was room inside a man to hold a womb. Dr Paulson said hormones might have to be given to replicate the changes that go on while a woman is pregnant.

Procuring a uterus would be necessary – either from a living donor or from a brain-dead donor – a complicate­d, ten-hour operation.

Once the uterus has been transplant­ed, an IVF embryo would have to be implanted. Dr Paulson said the

‘I don’t see any obvious problem’

field of ‘trans medicine’ has now ‘reached the mainstream’, adding: ‘I suspect there are going to be trans women who want to have a uterus and will likely get the transplant.’

Womb transplant is still very much an experiment­al procedure.

The first that resulted in a live birth took place in 2014, carried out by Dr Mats Brannstrom, of the University of Gothenburg in Sweden. The first British attempt at a womb transplant is expected to be carried out next year – on a woman – by Dr Richard Smith of Imperial College London.

In the UK it would be illegal for an IVF clinic to create an embryo for the purpose of implanting it in a man under the Human Fertilisat­ion and Embryology Act 2008.

An internatio­nal agreement, The Montreal Protocol, also stipulates that womb transplant­s should be carried out only in biological women.

Julian Savulescu, professor of practical ethics at Oxford University, said womb transplant­ation represents a ‘significan­t’ risk to the foetus and future child.

While there might be a ‘psychologi­cal benefit’ to the mother of carrying her own pregnancy, this had to be ‘weighed against any psychologi­cal harm to the child being born in this atypical way’.

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