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First UK baby born after womb transplant

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A baby boy is the first in the UK to be born after a womb transplant from a deceased donor, a development doctors say could offer hope to women born without a womb.

Grace Bell, in her 30s and from Kent, was born with MRKH syndrome, a condition in which a woman is born without a viable womb. She does not have periods but has normal ovaries.

At 16, she was told she would not be able to carry her own child.

As reported by the BBC, Bell’s womb transplant took 10 hours and was carried out at The Churchill Hospital in Oxford in June 2024.

Several months later, the couple underwent IVF treatment, followed by embryo transfer, at The Lister Fertility Clinic in London.

Her son, Hugo, was born just before Christmas 2025 at Queen Charlotte’s and Chelsea Hospital in west London, weighing nearly 7lbs. He is now 10 weeks old.

Bell said: “It was simply a miracle. I remember waking up in the morning and seeing his little face, with his little dummy in, and it felt like I needed to wake up from a dream.

“It was just incredible.”

Bell and her partner Steve Powell paid tribute to the donor and her family.

Bell said: “I think of my donor and her family every day and pray they find some peace in knowing their daughter gave me the biggest gift: the gift of life. A part of her will live on forever.”

The successful transplant is one of 10 deceased donor womb transplants taking place as part of a UK clinical research trial.

Three have already been carried out, but Hugo is the first baby born.

In early 2025, a baby called Amy was born through the first living womb donation in the UK, at the same London hospital.

Her mother received her older sister’s womb in a transplant operation in January 2023. Five further womb transplants from close living relatives are planned.

Consultant gynaecologist Prof Richard Smith, from Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, who began researching womb transplantation more than 25 years ago and was present at Hugo’s birth, said “a huge team of people” had been involved, from the transplant operation to embryo transfer and delivery.

Bell and Powell gave their son the middle name Richard in tribute to Smith, who also founded the charity Womb Transplant UK.

The couple may decide to have a second baby, after which surgeons plan to remove the transplanted womb.

This is to spare Bell from taking a lifetime of strong drugs to prevent the immune system attacking the transplanted organ.

Transplant surgeon and joint team leader Isabel Quiroga said she was “delighted” by Hugo’s birth and described it as a breakthrough for organ transplantation in the UK.

“Very few babies have been born in Europe as a result of their mothers receiving a womb from a deceased donor,” she said.

“Our trial is seeking to discover whether this procedure could become an approved and regular treatment for some of the increasing number of women of child-bearing age who do not have a viable womb.

Smith said the birth showed that girls and young women told they did not have a womb could now have hope of carrying their own child.

A baby born following a womb transplant from a deceased donor has no genetic link to the donor.

More than 100 womb transplant operations have been performed worldwide and more than 70 healthy babies have been born as a result.

Donating a womb for transplant differs from donating other organs, such as kidneys or a heart, as it requires a specific request to families who have already agreed to organ donation.

The donor’s parents, who wish to remain anonymous, said they felt “tremendous pride” in the legacy left by their daughter. She also donated five other organs, which were transplanted into four people.

“Through organ donation, she has given other families the precious gift of time, hope, healing and now life,” her family said.

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Fertility

Fertility treatment not tied to cancer risk, research finds

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Fertility treatment was not linked to a higher overall risk of invasive cancer in women, a large Australian study has found.

The study, published today in JAMA Network Open, analysed health records of more than 417,000 women and found some specific cancers were slightly more common, while others were less common.

The researchers said the findings need to be interpreted with caution, and in the context of the many factors that influence cancer risk.

Adrian Walker, joint lead author from UNSW’s Centre for Big Data Research in Health, said the overall findings were reassuring, with women who receive fertility treatment not having a higher total incidence of cancer than other women.

“Women who’ve had assisted fertility should continue to participate in routine cancer screening programs they’re eligible for,” he said.

And they should discuss their cancer risk with their doctor, to understand how else they can reduce their risk.”

The study analysed national health and cancer records from 417,984 Australian women who underwent medically assisted reproduction between 1991 and 2018.

This included IVF, intrauterine insemination and treatment with the fertility drug clomiphene. Cancer outcomes were examined over an average of 10 years.

The researchers compared how often cancer occurred in these women with how often it occurred in Australian women of the same age and in the same calendar years.

While the overall cancer rate was not higher, some specific cancers were slightly more common in women who had fertility treatment, while others were less common.

Uterine and ovarian cancer were slightly more common, as was melanoma. A non-invasive form of breast cancer was also more common in women who had IVF, but invasive breast cancer was not increased.

At the same time, some cancers, including cervical and lung cancer, were less common.

It is very normal for a specific group of people to have a slightly different cancer profile from the general population,” Walker said.

But as we see here, that doesn’t mean that their overall risk is increased.”

Claire Vajdic, professor at UNSW’s Kirby Institute and study lead, said the findings need to be interpreted carefully.

This study focused on comparing rates of cancer in different populations, not whether fertility treatments themselves cause cancer.

“As such, we must consider the pre-existing risks of cancer in these populations when interpreting the findings.

Women with infertility who are having or have had treatment, like all women, should ensure that they have regular check-ups, and seek further evaluation if they have concerns about unusual symptoms.”

Of the cancers that occurred at a higher rate than in the general population, uterine cancer was between 23 per cent and 83 per cent more common, depending on the type of fertility treatment.

Ovarian cancer was around 18 per cent to 23 per cent more common in women who had IVF or related treatments, while melanoma was about 7 per cent to 15 per cent more common.

On the other hand, some cancers were less common. Cervical cancer rates were about 40 per cent lower than in the general population, and lung cancer rates were about 30 per cent lower.

However, when the researchers looked at the actual number of additional cases, the difference was small. Across the cancers that were more common, the largest increase amounted to three to seven extra cases per 100,000 women per year.

So even where a relative increase was observed, the overall chance of developing cancer remained low.

Very few medical treatments are without risk, but the elevated cancer incidence here is low,” Vajdic said.

The researchers said there could be many reasons why certain cancers were more common in women who had fertility treatment.

Women who need fertility treatment may differ from other women in ways that affect cancer risk,” Vajdic said.

Certain underlying causes of infertility, such as endometriosis and polycystic ovary syndrome, are known to increase the risk of uterine and ovarian cancers.

The researchers showed Australian women who underwent fertility treatment were more likely to live in major cities and be socioeconomically advantaged.

Although not examined in this study, women having fertility treatment are also more likely to have fair skin and be less likely to smoke. Additionally, before starting fertility treatment, doctors must check that women are up to date with any recommended routine cancer screening.

All these factors will contribute to the cancer patterns observed in this study, including reduced lung cancer rates and reduced cervical cancer rates.

What this study does is describe cancer patterns we’re seeing at a population level,” Walker said.

It doesn’t tell us the risk of receiving treatment, or the risk for individual women who undergo treatment.”

Because many women in the study were still relatively young at the end of follow-up, the researchers said longer follow-up would provide additional insights.

Continued cancer awareness is important as this population ages,” Vajdic said.

The researchers concluded that cancer risk after fertility treatment was not higher overall, and that further research to better understand differences in incidence for individual cancers will help women and their doctors make informed decisions.

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Fertility

Maternal antibodies protect against newborn infection

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Maternal antibodies may protect babies from severe newborn infection caused by E. coli, after a study found the sickest infants had far lower levels.

A multi-centre study has shed new light on why some newborns become severely ill from Escherichia coli, or E. coli, while others do not.

The findings suggest most babies are protected by germ-fighting antibodies passed on by their mothers.

Sing Sing Way, an expert on immune system changes in expecting mothers and babies in the division of infectious diseases at Cincinnati Children’s and senior author on the study, said: “This helps explain long-standing question: if most babies are exposed to germs soon after birth, why don’t even more develop severe infection?

Our findings provide key missing piece to this puzzle, the antibodies stimulated by the presence of these common bacteria in our intestines protect us against infection. 

“In pregnancythe natural transfer of these germfighting antibodies from mothers to babies in the womb protect the vast majority against infection.

In the rare situation when these antibodies are low in mothers or inefficiently transferred, babies are at much higher risk for infection.”

The study examined why only some babies develop severe infection from common bacteria.

E. coli is a common bacterium that lives in the intestines of nearly all people and is a leading cause of severe infection in newborn babies.

The research found that the babies who became most severely ill from E. coli infection also had markedly lower levels of germ-fighting antibodies transferred from their mothers.

The multi-centre research was led by Cincinnati Children’s, in collaboration with the University of Queensland in Australia, the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Children’s Mercy Kansas City and the University of Missouri Kansas City School of Medicine.

To conduct the study, researchers retrieved dried blood samples collected during routine newborn screening from 100 babies who eventually developed E. coli infection and compared their antibody levels with those of hundreds of other infants who did not.

The analysis found that antibodies targeting E. coli were consistently reduced in infected babies. Because E. coli can vary widely, the researchers used a panel of strains isolated from infected babies to assess levels of these germ-fighting antibodies.

In a separate part of the study, the researchers used mice raised without any exposure to E. coli and therefore lacking the relevant antibodies.

They found that introducing a probiotic strain of E. coli, called Nissle 1917, to mice before pregnancy stimulated production of protective antibodies that efficiently protected newborn mice against infection.

The probiotic is widely available for human use in Europe, Asia and Australia under the trade name Mutaflor.

Mark Schembri, co-author and researcher at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience at the University of Queensland, said: “Understanding protection takes both types of evidence, what we can evaluate from specimens in human babies that naturally develop infection, and what we can test by experimentally causing infection.

By strategically combining real-world human newborn screening samples with carefully designed infection models, we can start to pinpoint which antibody targets matter most and how broad protection might be achieved.”

Susana Chavez-Bueno, co-author from Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, said: “Neonatal sepsis can escalate quickly, and clinicians need better ways to identify which infants are at highest risk. These findings suggest a path toward earlier risk recognition and eventually, prevention strategies built around restoring the missing protective maternal antibodies.”

The researchers said they plan to develop a screening test to identify newborns at highest risk of severe E. coli infection, and eventually a probiotic that could be safe for mothers and strengthen their own immunity as well as the immunity transferred to their babies.

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Hormone sensor could streamline IVF process

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A hormone sensor being developed in Australia could help reduce fertility treatment costs and patient pain during IVF.

When preparing for egg collection or an embryo transfer, IVF patients rely on clinicians to closely monitor hormone levels to ensure the procedure is timed precisely when progesterone, oestradiol and luteinising hormone levels are optimal, giving the patient the best chance at conception.

Currently, blood tests are the primary method of measuring progesterone levels, requiring patients to undergo multiple blood draws at a laboratory during certain stages of their menstrual cycle.

However, this approach has several limitations.

For example, if testing falls on a weekend, when most labs are closed, IVF providers are forced to choose a less optimal testing time, potentially affecting treatment precision.

University of Melbourne alumni Edgar Charry and Muhammad Umer, whose partners have lived experience of infertility, created a reproductive health solution by developing a biosensor that can detect progesterone and oestradiol levels using fluid found in the skin, rather than in the blood.

Their startup company Symex Labs has partnered with the University of Melbourne to translate their research into a commercial product.

“Previous research shows nearly all hormones that exist in blood, are also present in interstitial fluid,” said Symex Labs co-founder Charry.

“Interstitial fluid is clear fluid just under the skin that sits between cells, delivering nutrients and carrying away waste.”

“Our biosensor will eventually be worn as a patch and will work by penetrating the skin using small microneedles to attract progesterone molecules in the patient’s interstitial fluid.

“These molecules will bind to the surface of the probe, generating electrical activity. The technology then translates the electrical activity to progesterone levels, ultimately informing the IVF clinical team if the patient is ready for embryo transfer.

“This data will be sent directly to the clinic’s monitoring system, allowing IVF nurses to review the results and advise the patient.”

Monash IVF research director associate professor Mark Green said that, for Monash IVF, the investment in Symex Labs aligns with the company’s focus on innovation and improving the patient journey.

“This technology will save patients time and money as they can conveniently wear the patch in the comfort of their own home, resulting in fewer visits to the clinic and fewer painful injections,” associate professor Green said.

“The biosensor would also be a gamechanger for women living in regional areas, who often have to travel long distances for blood draws.”

As the exact amount of progesterone in interstitial fluid is not well understood, Symex Labs is conducting a world-first clinical study at Monash IVF to establish baseline levels by benchmarking them against concentrations measured in blood samples.

Researchers say their hormone tracking technology also has wider clinical applications beyond the IVF sector.

“Our wearable hormone biosensor has strong potential well beyond fertility care, particularly in PCOS management, perimenopause and menopause symptom management, where continuous hormone insight can replace today’s indirect, symptom-based tracking,” said Symex Labs co-founder Muhammad Umer.

“By integrating directly with consumer health apps, the technology can enable personalised, data-driven management of chronic hormonal conditions and life-stage transitions that currently lack real-time biomarkers.

“For example, if a woman’s oestrogen is going up and down constantly, that’s often a sign that she is getting into that stage, so having access to this health information could help women implement lifestyle changes earlier.”

The research has received A$2.5m in funding from the federal government, the University of Melbourne’s Genesis fund, Monash IVF, RMIT and Breakthrough Victoria.

The first in-human pilot study is expected to get underway within the next 12 months, with commercialisation plans slated for early 2028.

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