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- <text id=94TT1558>
- <title>
- Nov. 14, 1994: Medicine:Fertility with Less Fuss
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 79
- Fertility with Less Fuss
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A new technique from Australia may make it easier and cheaper
- for couples to have test-tube babies
- </p>
- <p>By Larry Thompson
- </p>
- <p> Making a test-tube baby is a test of human endurance--especially
- for the would-be mother. To start the process of in-vitro fertilization
- (IVF), she must submit to a two-week regimen of daily drug injections.
- They prepare her ovaries and cause perhaps half a dozen eggs
- to mature simultaneously, but the shots can also produce pain,
- bloating and sharp mood swings. Every day she undergoes tedious
- blood tests and ultrasound examinations: the doctors need to
- monitor the ovaries closely and remove the eggs at just the
- right time so they can be fertilized in the lab and then returned
- to the womb. Despite the hardships, infertile couples went through
- the costly, complex procedure 40,000 times last year in the
- U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Before long, though, they may have a better way to make a baby.
- This week, Alan Trounson, an IVF pioneer at Monash University
- in Melbourne, Australia, will tell the American Fertility Society
- meeting in San Antonio, Texas, that he and his colleagues have
- devised an alternate approach that is much cheaper, simpler
- and easier on the mother. It removes the need for fertility
- drugs and daily monitoring. "There is nothing terribly complicated
- about ((the procedure))," Trounson claims, "so it will spread
- like a brush fire because the patients want it."
- </p>
- <p> Trounson's method, called immature oocyte collection, is radically
- different from traditional IVF. Instead of priming the woman
- with fertility drugs so that eggs (the oocytes) will mature,
- doctors simply remove immature eggs. The timing is no longer
- crucial. Success hinges on two new techniques: locating the
- immature eggs and stimulating them to mature outside the ovary.
- </p>
- <p> The process begins with an examination of follicles, the tiny
- sacs in the ovary where eggs are found. Fertility doctors ordinarily
- focus on large follicles--nearly a half-inch wide--that
- contain mature eggs. But Trounson's partner, Dr. Carl Wood,
- discovered that the latest ultrasound machines could spot follicles
- that are less than a tenth of an inch wide and hold immature
- eggs. Wood developed a way to pluck the young eggs out of the
- smaller follicles with a specially designed needle. Trounson,
- after experiments with cattle, devised a cell-culturing procedure
- that ripens the immature eggs in the laboratory so they can
- be doused with sperm and fertilized.
- </p>
- <p> Robyn Hallam, 33, was a perfect candidate for the new, streamlined
- IVF. Unable to conceive naturally with her husband Tim, a grain
- farmer in Hopetoun, Australia, Robyn tried fertility drugs to
- no avail. As the couple prepared to undergo traditional IVF,
- they were offered Trounson's new approach. "We were told that
- there'd never been a baby born through this procedure," Robyn
- recalls. "We thought, `What do we have to lose?'"
- </p>
- <p> Instead of enduring drug treatments and monitoring, Robyn merely
- went to the Monash clinic to have immature eggs extracted. The
- doctors got six eggs and tried to fertilize them all, but only
- one developed into a viable embryo. It was implanted in Robyn's
- womb, and on Dec. 14, 1993, Kezia Hallam, Trounson's first bundle
- of success, was born.
- </p>
- <p> She was actually the fourth human born from an egg matured outside
- the ovary. In 1991, Dr. Kwang Yul Cha and his colleagues at
- the Cha Woman's Hospital in Seoul removed the ovaries of a woman
- with fibroid tumors and isolated immature eggs, which were then
- ripened and fertilized in the lab. They transferred the embryos
- to a surrogate mother, who produced triplets. Since then Cha
- has not repeated his success.
- </p>
- <p> Trounson and the Monash team, in contrast, have impregnated
- several more women. IVF America, a Greenwich, Connecticut, company
- associated with Monash, plans to develop the technique in the
- U.S.
- </p>
- <p> If Trounson's approach works as well as he says, it could transform
- the economics of the test-tube baby business. Standard IVF can
- cost more than $100,000, but Trounson says he can slash that
- figure 80% by eliminating drugs, curtailing testing and reducing
- doctors' fees.
- </p>
- <p> American fertility experts doubt that Trounson's method will
- save as much money as he claims. What's more, they question
- whether the treatment will be useful for the majority of infertile
- women. "I don't think we have data to prove that this will give
- the woman a better chance of success," says Dr. Suheil Muasherof
- the Jones Institute for Reproductive Medicine in Norfolk, Virginia.
- Trounson admits that he cannot predict the procedure's success
- rate, but in cattle, 30% of the embryos from immature eggs become
- calves. That's slightly better than the current 25% success
- rate for IVF in humans.
- </p>
- <p> It's too soon to tell whether Trounson's technique will revolutionize
- the treatment of infertility. But the desperate couples who
- face the emotionally and financially draining ordeal of making
- a test-tube baby will be eager to find out.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-