In August last year, IVF specialists in the UK made world headlines when they announced they were offering women the chance to outsmart our biological clocks – to keep menopause at bay and prolong our fertility by as much as 20 years. For those pushing 40 who are still hoping to have a baby (but are not yet with the right partner), or who dread the prospect of menopause and its infamous symptoms and health risks, it surely sounds too good to be true.
To date, at least 10 women, aged 22 to 36, have taken up the offer by Professor Simon Fishel, chief executive of ProFam and founder of the CARE Fertility Group in Birmingham. The procedure they’ve undergone is ovarian tissue freezing and grafting. It’s by no means new; it’s been offered for years to young cancer patients facing chemotherapy who want to preserve their fertility. But according to ProFam, this is the first project in the world to provide the procedure to healthy women, specifically to postpone menopause.
SO HOW DOES IT WORK?
‘The human ovary has a limited number of follicles that produce an egg and hormones during each monthly cycle,’ says Joburg-based reproductive medicine specialist Dr Chris Venter. ‘As you age, this number of follicles depletes, eventually resulting in menopause. So the young ovary is significantly more hormonally active than the older ovary.’
In ovarian tissue grafting, a piece of the egg-laden tissue is removed by laparoscopic surgery while you are as young as possible (ProFam will do it up to age 40). It’s sliced up and frozen, possibly for decades – ready to be thawed and transplanted back when needed, through similar surgery. If you hope to get pregnant, the slice will be regrafted on or near your ovary, where the mature eggs it releases can be picked up by your fallopian tubes for natural fertilization.
This story is from the February 2020 edition of Fairlady.
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This story is from the February 2020 edition of Fairlady.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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