Spanish researchers aim to 'trick nature' with artificial womb
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[June 30, 2023]
By Horaci Garcia
BARCELONA (Reuters) - Researchers in Barcelona are trying to "trick
nature" by creating an artificial womb for extremely premature babies
after tests on animals kept foetuses alive for 12 days.
Their artificial placenta prototype recreates a protective environment
with a translucent container made of biocompatible material inside which
the foetus' lungs, intestines and brain can continue to develop.
It is connected to an amniotic fluid circulation system that maintains
the foetus isolated from external stimuli but accessible for ultrasound
controls and monitoring.
Babies born after six months of pregnancy or less are considered
extremely premature with a high risk of death or disability. The World
Health Organization's latest figures show that around 900,000 such
babies died worldwide in 2019.
"We try to develop a system that allows us to keep a foetus outside its
mother but still in the foetal conditions: that it continues to breathe
through the umbilical cord ... that we can feed it through the umbilical
cord, that it lives surrounded by fluid at a constant temperature,"
project head Eduard Gratacos told Reuters.
He leads a team of 35 from BCNatal medical research centre - a fusion of
the maternal-fetal medicine and obstetrics departments of two Barcelona
hospitals - and Fundacion La Caixa, a private organisation funded by
Caixabank.
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A premature lamb fetus is seen inside an
artificial womb developed by researchers from BCNatal in Barcelona,
Spain, in this screen grab from a video released on June 19, 2023
and obtained by Reuters on June 29, 2023. La Caixa
Foundation/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
'EXTREMELY DELICATE'
The team has conducted pre-clinical studies with lambs, where they
achieved 12-day foetus survival, and plans to also test with pigs
before proposing a human trial in a few years.
"The highly-complex project spans many different specialties of
medicine and requires engineers of different types. It's a
challenge, it's extremely delicate to achieve this, to trick nature
to make this possible," Gratacos said.
Among a few such projects worldwide, one group of scientists at the
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia managed to keep animal foetuses
alive for 28 days.
Kelly Werner, assistant professor of paediatrics at Columbia
University, told the Science Media Centre the Spanish team's
positive results must be rigorously tested in clinical trials on
humans to check for safety and side effects.
"Although it is an exciting development, the artificial placenta is
not intended to replace a natural placenta," Werner said. "That is,
despite these advancements, we still should make every effort to
support maternal health and decrease risk factors that lead to
preterm birth."
(Reporting by Horaci Garcia; Writing by Emma Pinedo; Editing by
David Latona and Andrew Cawthorne)
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