The woman, who was diagnosed with sickle-cell anemia when she was
five and emigrated to Belgium at age 11, needed a bone marrow
transplant to treat her sickle-cell condition -- a procedure that
requires chemotherapy first.
Thinking of her future potential to have a family, the Belgian
doctors decided before starting the treatment to remove the
patient's right ovary when she was 13 years and 11 months old and
froze tissue fragments.
Reporting the success in the journal Human Reproduction, Belgian
doctors said it pointed to a future where children with serious
illnesses such as cancer may find a way to have babies many years
later.
"This is an important breakthrough in the field because children are
the patients who are most likely to benefit ... in the future," said
Isabelle Demeestere, a gynecologist and research associate at
Belgium's Erasme Hospital.
"When they are diagnosed with diseases that require treatment that
can destroy ovarian function, freezing ovarian tissue is the only
... option for preserving their fertility."
While there have been reports of successful pregnancies after
ovarian transplantation using tissue removed from adult patients,
there have been none yet using tissue taken from girls before
puberty.
This patient, who has asked to remain anonymous, had not started her
periods when her ovary tissue was removed and frozen, although her
doctors said there were signs she had started puberty with breast
development at around age 10. After undergoing chemotherapy, a bone
marrow transplant and more than a year of treatment with immuno-suppressive
drugs after developing graft-versus-host disease, her remaining
ovary failed at the age of 15.
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But 12 years later, after doctors successfully transplanted the
thawed ovarian tissue the patient became pregnant at age 27 and
delivered a healthy boy in November 2014.
However, Demeestere, as well as independent experts, cautioned that
the procedure's potential success needs to be further explored for
young, pre-pubertal girls.
"There had previously been uncertainty as to whether ovarian tissue
taken from young girls would later on be competent to produce
mature, fertile eggs, so today's case is both reassuring and
exciting," said Adam Balen, a professor at the Leeds Centre for
Reproductive Medicine.
He added: "We have to remember that many children who require
chemotherapy are very ill and the surgery to remove ovarian tissue
is no small undertaking."
(Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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