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Uterus transplantation comes to the United States

OBG Management. 2016 February;28(2):
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The Cleveland Clinic embarks on treating uterine factor infertility

    In this Article

  • Hurdles to IRB approval
  • The quality-of-life era in transplant medicine

To remove the variable of risks for the donor, we decided that we would go in another direction and use the typical approach to donor transplants that is taken in this country, which is to use cadaveric, or brain dead, donors. The use of deceased donors allows us to isolate larger vascular pedicles for transplantation. Although we do not have IRB approval for live donors we are working in animal models to come up with an alternative technique to obtain vessels appropriate for anastomosis.

To address complications for the recipient, including the necessity to continually take antirejection, or immunosuppressive, medications, our recommendation to patients who undergo uterus transplantation surgery is to remove the uterus after delivery of 2 babies. Our plan at that time will be to perform a cesarean delivery and remove the uterus.

Right now in the process we are going through the screening phase and beginning IVF. We are approved for 10 women, and all potential recipients went through the necessary criteria, including psychological counseling. During IVF, each woman needs to have between 6 and 10 embryos (blastocysts).

OBG Management: Do you think that organ transplant pioneers foresaw successful transplantation of a uterus?
Dr. Falcone, MD: I do not think Dr. Tzakis, who is a transplant pioneer and has been doing this his entire career of 25 years or so, even foresaw this. This is something that has evolved over time. The first transplants (of kidney, heart, and liver) were to save lives. Subsequently, quality-of- life transplants have occurred, such as the face transplant and the larynx transplant. Uterus transplants are not to save lives, but they do improve quality of life, and I think that is what is important.

There is a lot of controversy surrounding this procedure—just like many aspects of reproductive medicine. A lot of what we do is full of controversy: IVF, gestational carriers, and genetic screening in utero. But we are in the quality-of-life era with transplantation medicine. If women have a strong desire to carry their own child, and surrogacy is not an option, then this may be one.

Tommasso Falcone, MD, was co-director of the Pelvic Anatomy and Gynecologic Surgery (PAGS) Symposium held in Las Vegas, Nevada, December 10–12, 2015. He offered workshops and seminars during the Scientific Program on diverse topics, including: hysteroscopy; ultrasonography; pelvic and abdominal anatomy; myometomy; hysterectomy; endometriosis; avoiding laparoscopic complications; medicolegal considerations; and surgical tips and techniques.

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