Uterus transplants allow successful pregnancies in U.S. women-study
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[July 07, 2022]
By Shawana Alleyne-Morris
(Reuters) - More than half of U.S. women
who received a uterus through a transplant went on to have successful
pregnancies, a new study shows.
Between 2016 and 2021, 33 women received uterus transplants in the
United States and so far 19 of them, or 58%, have delivered a total of
21 babies, researchers reported on Wednesday in JAMA Surgery.
"Uterus transplant should be considered a clinical reality in the U.S.,"
the researchers wrote.
All of the women had so-called absolute uterine-factor infertility,
meaning they were either born without a uterus or needed to have it
removed.
More than a million U.S. women could potentially benefit from uterus
transplantation, study leader Dr. Liza Johannesson of Baylor University
Medical Center in Dallas said in an email.
In 74% of recipients, the uterus was still functioning one year
post-transplant. In this group, 83% had live-born children, researchers
reported.
The babies were all delivered by Cesarean section, at an average of 14
months after the transplant. More than half were born after 36 weeks'
gestation.
After the recipient gives birth, the transplanted uterus is removed to
avoid the need for life-long use of immunosuppressive drugs.
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A pregnant woman, in the last trimester of her pregnancy, poses in
this illustration photo in Sete, South France, March 26, 2016.
REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/File Photo
The U.S. surgeries, performed at Baylor University
Medical Center, the Cleveland Clinic, and the Hospital of the
University of Pennsylvania, are among the more than 100 uterus
transplants so far performed worldwide.
Cost may be a barrier for some women.
"Uterus transplant is de facto a fertility treatment," and some
insurance companies may refuse to cover it, coauthor Dr. Giuliano
Testa of Baylor said in an email.
"Insurance coverage for uterus transplantation is part of a larger
discussion involving coverage for infertility care in general,"
Johannesson said.
In two-thirds of the U.S. transplants, the uterus came from a living
donor, roughly one in four of whom experienced a complication from
the surgery.
"Reducing the risk to living donors should be a goal... if the
deceased donor pool is not adequate," Drs. Rachel Forbes and Seth
Karp of Vanderbilt University in Nashville wrote in an accompanying
editorial.
(Reporting by Shawana Alleyne-Morris; editing by Nancy Lapid,
Caroline Humer and Alexandra Hudson)
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