Health

Doctors in Sweden successfully transplant wombs

The experimental surgery may allow infertile women to become pregnant but is not without critics

A research team practices transplanting a uterus at Sahlgrenska Hospital in Goteborg, Sweden, in 2012.
AP Photo/University of Goteborg, Johan Wingborg

Nine women in Sweden have successfully received transplanted uteruses donated from relatives in an experimental procedure that has raised some ethical concerns. The women will soon try to become pregnant with their new wombs, Dr. Mats Brannstrom, the leader of the pioneering project, has revealed.

The women were born without a uterus or had it removed because of cervical cancer. Most are in their 30s and are part of the first major experiment to test whether it's possible to transplant uteruses into women so that they can give birth.

In many European countries, including Sweden, using a pregnancy surrogate isn't allowed.

Lifesaving transplants of organs such as hearts, livers and kidneys have been done for decades, and doctors are increasingly transplanting hands, faces and other body parts to improve patients' quality of life. Uterus transplants — the first ones are intended to be temporary, just to allow childbearing — push that frontier even farther.

There have been two other attempts to transplant uteruses — in Turkey and Saudi Arabia — but both failed to produce babies. Scientists in Britain, Hungary and elsewhere are planning similar operations, but the efforts in Sweden are the most advanced.

"This is a new kind of surgery," Brannstrom told The Associated Press in an interview from Goteborg. "We have no textbook to look at."

He said the nine uterus recipients are doing well. Many already had their periods six weeks after the transplants — an early sign that the wombs are healthy and functioning. One woman had an infection in her new uterus, and others had some minor rejection episodes, but none of the recipients or donors needed intensive care after the surgeries, he said. All left the hospital within days.

The operations did not connect the uteruses to the fallopian tubes, so the women are unable to become pregnant naturally. But all who received a womb have their own ovaries. Before the transplants, the women had some eggs removed and fertilized in vitro. The embryos were then frozen, and doctors plan to transfer them into the new uteruses, allowing the women to carry their biological children.

The transplants have ignited hope among women unable to have children because they lost their uterus to cancer or were born without one. About 1 in 4,500 women is born with a syndrome, known as MRKH, in which she doesn't have a uterus.

Fertility experts have hailed the project as significant but stress it's unknown whether the transplants will result in healthy babies.

Ethical concerns

Some experts have raised concerns about whether it's ethical to use living donors for an experimental procedure that doesn't save lives.

In Britain, doctors planning to perform uterus transplants will use wombs only from dying or dead people, as the transplant team in Turkey did last year. The Turkish doctors announced their patient got pregnant but miscarried after two months.

Dr. Richard Smith, head of the U.K. charity Womb Transplant UK, which is trying to raise $823,000 to carry out five operations in Britain, said Brannstrom "has done something amazing, and we understand completely why he has taken this route, but we are wary of that approach." 

He said removing a uterus for donation is like a radical hysterectomy but requires taking a bigger chunk of the surrounding blood vessels to ensure adequate blood flow, raising the risk of complications for the donor. Smith said British officials don't consider it ethical to let donors take such chances for an operation that isn't lifesaving.

But John Harris, a bioethics expert at the University of Manchester, didn't see a problem with that, as long as donors are fully informed. He said donating a kidney isn't necessarily lifesaving yet is widely promoted.

"Dialysis is available, but we have come to accept and to even encourage people to take risks to donate a kidney," he said.

Smith said the biggest question is how any pregnancies will proceed.

"The principal concern for me is if the baby will get enough nourishment from the placenta and if the blood flow is good enough," he said.

The Associated Press

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