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Could a drug made for lung patients help older women have babies?

... and other exciting advances to help boost female fertility

- By FIONA MACRAE

Egg-freezing ‘packages’, s’, paid leave for fertility ty appointmen­ts and discounts nts for IVF: these are among the he perks being offered by banks, ks, law firms, supermarke­ts and other her employers as a way to retain and nd recruit female employees.

But while this support will put fertility ity treatment within the reach of many more ore women, it won’t necessaril­y increase their eir odds of motherhood.

As with natural conception, with IVF VF (in vitro fertilisat­ion, where an egg is fertilised the by sperm in a lab) a reduction in the number and quality of eggs means success ess rates fall with age.

A woman under 35 has a one-in-three ree chance of having a baby per round of IVF VF using her own eggs; by her mid-40s, the he odds of success are 4 per cent.

Infertilit­y — not being able to conceive ive despite having regular unprotecte­d sex for a year — affects one in seven UK couples. es.

The emotional rollercoas­ter of infertilit­y ity treatment was eloquently highlighte­d ed recently by actress Jennifer Aniston, who described spending years ‘throwing everything’ last at trying to become a mother.

The 54-year- old said in november last year: ‘it was a challengin­g road. i was going ing through IVF, drinking Chinese teas, you ou name it.’ She added that, for her, ‘the ship hip has sailed’.

The— he — But scientists continue to tease out the secrets of women’s reproducti­ve health from rejuvenati­ng ageing ovaries to preventing miscarriag­es — to make ke motherhood more achievable for millions. nsss.

Here, we look at some of the most st promising options.

DRUG TO REJUVENATE OLD OVARIES

One reason a woman’s fertility falls with th age is that her ovaries release eggs less regularly, starting in her 30s when she still has thousands of eggs left. Tackling this is ‘one of the biggest challenges in reproducti­ve medicine’, says Professor rebecca robker, a biomedical scientist at the University of Adelaide.

She recently led a study showing that pirfenidon­e, a drug used to treat lung fibrosis (where a stiffening of the lung tissue makes it difficult to breathe) can more than double the number of eggs produced by ageing ovaries.

In experiment­s on 12-month-old mice (equivalent to 35 years in humans), Professor robker found ovaries become stiffer with age (they had more fibrosis). But when mice were given pirfenidon­e, it softened the ovaries, making them produce more eggs than untreated mice, the journal Science Advances reported last year.

Researcher­s believe fibrosis ‘traps’ eggs in the ovaries, preventing their growth and release — and pirfenidon­e gives them room to expand and break free.

Professor robker told good Health: ‘We might anticipate that an anti-fibrosis treatment would provide a woman of advanced reproducti­ve age a greater chance of producing any eggs, as well as a chance of producing more than one.’

She hopes to start clinical trials of these drugs in future.

‘WAKE-UP’ JABS FROM OWN BLOOD

COULD an injection of a woman’s own blood make later- in- life motherhood easier to achieve?

Doctors at lubeck University, germany, are investigat­ing whether platelet- rich plasma (PRP) — blood processed to be extra-rich in platelets, which are cells involved in clotting and blood vessel repair — can ‘wake up’ resting eggs in women in their late 30s and early 40s.

‘Age-related infertilit­y is one of the most pressing problems in reproducti­ve medicine,’ says georg griesinger, a professor of reproducti­ve roductive medicine, leading the trial. ‘As IVF doctors, we frequently encounter older patients who only produce one or two oocytes [eggs] or none. The only option for these women is to use oocytes from a donor, but many want to have a child that is geneticall­y theirs.’

PRP is already used in other areas of medicine, including orthopaedi­cs — it’s thought that proteins released by the platelets speed up healing of damaged tendons. now, doctors are studying whether these proteins can also activate immature eggs, coaxing them into maturing so more eggs can be collected before IVF.

Early studies of the technique in greece have been promising, with women who have gone through the menopause becoming pregnant after treatment.

In a new trial, 140 women will have a teaspoonfu­l of PRP or a placebo injected into their ovaries. The number of eggs they then produce will be counted, with the first results due next year.

If the treatment is effective, it is simple enough for widespread use and could cost less than £900 a patient, says Professor griesinger.

‘ Platelet- rich plasma isn’t without promise,’ adds grace dugdale, a reproducti­ve biologist and founder of preconcept­ion website Balance fertility. ‘However, the results so far are mixed and there are also potential safety concerns, including whether it might increase the risk of cancer.’

BUILDING A BETTER WOMB LINING ‘NEST’

A NEW drug aims to overcome one of the main IVF hurdles: implantati­on failure.

In IVF, the egg is fertilised in the lab, creating an embryo, then transferre­d to the woman’s womb.

The embryo needs to implant in the womb lining (endometriu­m) to continue growing. But in more than half of IVF cycles the embryo doesn’t implant properly, so the woman either doesn’t become pregnant or quickly miscarries. Currently, there are no drugs to improve implantati­on.

A new treatment from Spanish biotech company Oxolife aims to boost implantati­on rates by improving the structure of the endometriu­m and its blood supply, providing the embryo with oxygen and nutrients. in animal trials the drug, OXO-001, increased implantati­on rates by up to 15 per cent, according to unpublishe­d results.

A small- scale trial on women showed the tablets were safe; they are now being trialled on 350 women undergoing IVF. The women will take either OXO-001 or placebo tablets daily before and after embryo transfer, with pregnancy rates compared.

The first results are due next month: 75 babies have already been born to women taking part in the trial, although it’s not yet known how many of these took the active drug.

The company website states OXO-001 ‘acts directly on the endometriu­m to enhance and improve the embryo implantati­on process’, although the exact mechanism is undisclose­d.

‘The endometriu­m is like a nest that receives the embryo and if that nest isn’t well prepared, implantati­on will not take place,’ says dr Agnes Arbat, a doctor and clinical pharmacolo­gist and Oxolife’s CEO. ‘Clinicians tell us they’d be more than happy with a 3 per cent increase in implantati­on rates. Based on the data we have, we’re hoping for 5-7 per cent.’

Grace dugdale says: ‘implantati­on failure is an issue in IVF — there are definitely times when a good embryo inexplicab­ly fails to implant. There are lots of causes and, while we don’t know exactly how this drug works, new treatments are definitely needed.’

PROBIOTICS TO BOOST PREGNANCY RATES

DOCTORS are increasing­ly interested in the role of the vaginal microbiome — the delicate balance of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ bacteria in the vagina — in fertility. The theory is that if ‘bad’ bacteria overgrow, they can travel to the womb, hampering implantati­on chances.

A 2016 study in denmark of IVF patients found women whose vaginal microbiome­s were ‘out of balance’ (where harmful bacteria start to outnumber the beneficial ones) had just a 9 per cent chance of getting pregnant, compared to 44 per cent of those with normal microbiome­s. (An imbalanced vaginal microbiome is very common, occurring in 20 per cent of the general population and 30 per cent of IVF patients, often without symptoms.)

Now researcher­s at Aarhus University Hospital in denmark are testing whether a probiotic powder packed with ‘ good’ bacteria can boost a woman’s chances of becoming a mother. Almost 350 women with an abnormal vaginal microbiome have received the treatment with preliminar­y results due in weeks.

Professor glenn gibson, a microbiolo­gist at reading University, says: ‘This research on the vaginal microbiome is being well carried out and its results could have large implicatio­ns for IVF and resulting pregnancy rates.’

SUPERCHARG­ING EGGS FOR IVF

THE ability to grow large quantities of a woman’s eggs in the lab could lead to a kinder form

of IVF, say Edinburgh University scientists. An early IVF step is egg stimulatio­n (a woman injects herself daily with fertility hormones for ten to 12 days to increase the number of eggs she produces).

Side-effects include breast tenderness, bloating, nausea and mood swings, and a risk of ovarian hyperstimu­lation syndrome (OHSS), which causes the ovaries to swell painfully.

Up to a third of women undergoing IVF have mild OHSS; one in 100 develop moderate or severe OHSS, which is potentiall­y fatal. The hormone injections are also expensive — potentiall­y adding £1,000 to the bill for an IVF cycle. Courses may need to be repeated. The new approach could bypass this.

‘Women are born with a large store of immature eggs,’ says researcher Evelyn Telfer, a professor of reproducti­ve biology at Edinburgh.

‘They ovulate only 0.1 per cent of them; the other 99.9 per cent degenerate and die. We’re working on a way of preserving these immature eggs and growing them outside the body.’

In 2018, Edinburgh researcher­s became the first in the world to grow human eggs to maturity in the lab thanks to a discovery that a certain level of tension in ovarian tissue helps keep eggs in their immature state; relaxing the tissue kick-starts developmen­t. They have now started studies in sheep to check if the offspring from lab-grown eggs are healthy.

Successful animal studies could mean the first women could be treated in five to ten years. In future, instead of undergoing the stress and expense of multiple rounds of hormone injections to produce eggs for IVF, women could have a sliver of one of their ovaries removed through keyhole surgery.

The immature eggs would then be triggered into growing in the lab, with one small piece of tissue potentiall­y yielding thousands of eggs — more than enough for their IVF needs.

Sarah Norcross, director of the fertility charity Progress Educationa­l Trust, says: ‘Although this is some way off, the principle of being able to generate greater numbers of eggs is really exciting.

‘Anything that reduces the grim regimen of hormone injections that women have to go through as part of IVF would be welcomed by a lot of them.’

 ?? Picture: SHUTTERSTO­CK/ PHOTOCREO/MICHAL BEDNAREK ??
Picture: SHUTTERSTO­CK/ PHOTOCREO/MICHAL BEDNAREK

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