Recipients of India’s first uterine transplants leave hospital

June 08, 2017 11:46 pm | Updated 11:46 pm IST - Pune

Three weeks after the successful completion of India’s first uterine transplants, both patients — one from Solapur and another from Gujarat — were discharged on Thursday. The transplants were performed by the doctors at the city-based Galaxy Care Laparoscopy Institute (GCLI).

The woman from Solapur, who suffers from congenital uterus absence, was fitted with her mother’s womb, which was retrieved mainly through laparoscopic or minimally invasive surgery after a nine-hour operation on May 18. The second womb transplant, of a woman from Baroda with a dysfunctional uterus and suffering from Asherman’s Syndrome (adhesions or internal scar tissues), was achieved in even lesser time the following day. “Two doctors each in Gujarat and Solapur have been asked to monitor the women,” said Dr. Shailesh Puntambekar, Medical Director, GCLI, who led the team which performed the surgeries.

“Both patients are in good health. After internal tests, we find that the inner lining of the uterus in both cases has thickened while the blood parameters are within normal range. Menstruation is expected by day 40 since the conclusion of the operation,” said Dr. Puntambekar, He said the pregnancies in the future would be in-vitro fertilization as opposed to natural conception.

The cervical biopsy tests to gauge organ rejection after the uterus transplant carried out on both patients in the first and second weeks after the operation showed no signs of organ rejection, said Dr. Sanjeev Jadhav, a cardiovascular thoracic surgeon who played a major role in the operations.

Dr. Puntambekar said that sperms had been taken from the respective husbands of the patients and that eight embryos had been frozen. “We will have to wait for another six months at least before the embryos would can be implanted in the transplanted wombs.”

Both women expressed happiness that the surgeries were successful and hoped they would be able to become pregnant in the near future. The hospital has received more than 80 applications since the transplants. Most cases are those of women with congenital uterus absence. About 20 uterine transplant operations have been performed around the world to date.

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