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Reproduction Advance Publication first posted online on 26 August 2008
Reproduction (2008)
DOI: 10.1530/REP-08-0099
Copyright © 2008 Society for Reproduction and Fertility
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REVIEW

Ovary and Uterus Transplantation

R G Gosden

R Gosden, CRMI, Weill Medical College - Cornell University, New York, 10021, United States

Correspondence: R G Gosden, Email: rgg2004{at}med.cornell.edu

Abstract

Ovarian and uterine transplantation are procedures gaining more attention again because of potential applications in, respectively, fertility preservation for cancer and other patients and, more tentatively, women with uterine agenesis or hysterectomy. Cryopreservation of tissue slices, and possibly whole organs, is providing opportunities for banking ovaries for indefinite periods before transplanting them to restore fertility. The natural plasticity of this organ facilitates grafting to different sites where they can be revascularized and rapidly restore the normal physiology of secretion and ovulation. Ischemic damage is a chief limitation because many follicles are lost, at least in avascular grafts, and functional longevity is reduced. Nevertheless, grafts of young ovarian tissue, even after cryoprervation, can be highly fertile in laboratory rodents and, in humans, autografts have functioned for up to three years before needing replacement. Transplantation by vascular anastomosis provides potentially longer function but it is technically much more demanding and riskier for the recipient. It is the only practicable method with the uterus, and has enabled successful pregnancies in several species, but not yet in humans. Contrary to claims made many years ago, neither organ is privileged immunologically, and allografts become rapidly rejected except in hosts whose immune system is deficient or suppressed pharmacologically. All in all, transplantation of these organs, especially the ovary, provides a broad platform of opportunities for research and new applications in reproductive medicine and conservation biology.







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Copyright © 2008 by the Society for Reproduction and Fertility.