LONDON (AP) â" A Swedish doctor says four  women who received transplanted wombs have had  embryos transferred into them in an attempt to get  pregnant.
  
  He would not say on  Monday whether any of the women had succeeded. In  all, nine women in Sweden have received new wombs  since 2012, but two had to have them removed  because of complications.
  
  The women  received wombs donated by their mothers or other  close relatives in an experimental procedure  designed to test whether its possible to transfer  a uterus so a woman can give birth to her own  biological child. The women had in vitro  fertilization before the transplants, using their  own eggs to make embryos.
  
  "We have  already begun transferring embryos into four of  the women and plan to make attempts with the  others when they are ready," said Dr. Mats  Brannstrom, a professor of obstetrics and  gynecology at the University of Goteburg, who is  leading the research.
  
  Brannstrom  predicted that three or four of the seven women  might successfully give birth.
  
  "One  or two more will perhaps get pregnant and  miscarry, and one or two wont be able to get  pregnant," he said.
  
  There have been  two previous attempts to transplant a womb â" in  Turkey and Saudi Arabia â" but both failed to  produce babies. Doctors in Britain and Hungary  also are planning similar operations, but using  wombs from women who had just died.
  
   Brannstrom said any woman in the study who does  get pregnant will be on a low dose of drugs to  keep from rejecting the transplanted womb and will  be monitored as a high-risk pregnancy.
  
  The transplants are intended to benefit women  unable to have children because they lost a uterus  to cancer or were born without one.
  
   Some doctors said women who got pregnant with a  new uterus would have to be watched carefully for  how the womb progresses throughout pregnancy.
  
  "There are questions about how the  physiological changes in the uterus will affect  the mother and whether the transplanted uterus  will be conducive to a growing baby," said Dr.  Charles Kingsland, a spokesman for Britains Royal  College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and a  gynecologist at Liverpool Womens Hospital.
   
  In a study published last week, Brannstrom  and colleagues described the procedures used to  transplant the nine wombs and said there were  "mild rejection episodes" in four patients.
   
  He said the transplanted wombs would be  removed after a maximum of two pregnancies.
   
  Other experts called it a promising step  but said it would be crucial that babies get  enough nutrients from the mothers blood supply.
  
  "We really dont know if the blood flow  to the uterus will increase and adapt in the same  way," as in a regular pregnancy, said Dr. Yacoub  Khalaf, director of the Assisted Conception unit  at Guys and St. Thomas hospital in London.
   
  "It is a good sign they have done the  (embryo) transfers," Khalaf said. "But a live  birth will be the best validation that this  works."
Saturday, May 16, 2015
4 women with new wombs are trying to get pregnant
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