The 34-year-old woman receiving the womb (also known as a uterus) was born with Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser syndrome (MRKH), a rare condition affecting about one in every 5,000 women. Her 40-year-old sister offered to donate her womb after completing her own family. The transplant took place in February, at the Oxford transplant centre, but the surgeons only went public with the news on Wednesday, after details were published in an obstetrics and gynaecology journal and doctors were able to report both patients were recovering well. The surgery took nine hours and 20 minutes and the woman will need to take immunosuppressant drugs throughout any future pregnancy to prevent her body rejecting the donor organ, with the transplant expected to last a maximum of five years before the womb is removed. Uterine transplantations have been carried out in more than 90 cases internationally over the past 10 years, with most involving a living donor. About 50 babies have been born as a result. The team in Oxford practised the procedure on animals first, including rabbits, pigs and sheep. Balen, who runs a clinic for girls born with congenital abnormalities such as the absence of a uterus, sees the procedure “as an alternative to surrogacy for women wishing to carry their own babies”. The first ever procedure was pioneered in Sweden in 2013, where surrogacy is illegal, he said. What happens next? The ultimate test will be whether the recipient can get pregnant and carry a baby to full term in her new womb. She underwent IVF before the operation, using her own eggs (she was born with ovaries, just no womb), and hopes to have the resulting embryos implanted in her donated womb soon. She has since had three periods, which doctors see as a positive sign that her reproductive system is functioning well. If she does get pregnant, the baby will need to be delivered by caesarean section, according to Balen. “The transplanted uterus is usually removed after the family is complete to avoid the prolonged use of anti-rejection medication,” he said. Does this open the door for men or trans women to carry babies? |