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1995-01-31
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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>