First birth from a deceased donor uterus in the United States: from severe graft rejection to successful cesarean delivery

Uterus transplantation is the only known potential treatment for absolute uterine factor infertility. It offers a unique setting for the investigation of immunologic adaptations of pregnancy in the context of the pharmacologic-induced tolerance of solid organ transplants, thus providing valuable ins...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of obstetrics and gynecology 2020-08, Vol.223 (2), p.143-151
Hauptverfasser: Flyckt, Rebecca, Falcone, Tommaso, Quintini, Cristiano, Perni, Uma, Eghtesad, Bijan, Richards, Elliott G., Farrell, Ruth M., Hashimoto, Koji, Miller, Charles, Ricci, Stephanie, Ferrando, Cecile A., D’Amico, Giuseppe, Maikhor, Shana, Priebe, Debra, Chiesa-Vottero, Andres, Heerema-McKenney, Amy, Mawhorter, Steven, Feldman, Myra K., Tzakis, Andreas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Uterus transplantation is the only known potential treatment for absolute uterine factor infertility. It offers a unique setting for the investigation of immunologic adaptations of pregnancy in the context of the pharmacologic-induced tolerance of solid organ transplants, thus providing valuable insights into the early maternal-fetal interface. Until recently, all live births resulting from uterus transplantation involved living donors, with only 1 prior birth from a deceased donor. The Cleveland Clinic clinical trial of uterus transplantation opened in 2015. In 2017, a 35 year old woman with congenital absence of the uterus was matched to a 24 year old parous deceased brain-dead donor. Transplantation of the uterus was performed with vaginal anastomosis and vascular anastomoses bilaterally from internal iliac vessels of the donor to the external iliac vessels of the recipient. Induction and maintenance immunosuppression were achieved and subsequently modified in anticipation of pregnancy 6 months after transplant. Prior to planned embryo transfer, ectocervical biopsy revealed ulceration and a significant diffuse, plasma cell–rich mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate, with histology interpreted as grade 3 rejection suspicious for an antibody-mediated component. Aggressive immunosuppressive regimen targeting both cellular and humoral rejection was initiated. After 3 months of treatment, there was no histologic evidence of rejection, and after 3 months from complete clearance of rejection, an uneventful embryo transfer was performed and a pregnancy was established. At 21 weeks, central placenta previa with accreta was diagnosed. A healthy neonate was delivered by cesarean hysterectomy at 34 weeks’ gestation. In summary, this paper highlights the first live birth in North America resulting from a deceased donor uterus transplant. This achievement underscores the capacity of the transplanted uterus to recover from a severe, prolonged rejection and yet produce a viable neonate. This is the first delivery from our ongoing clinical trial in uterus transplantation, including the first reported incidence of severe mixed cellular/humoral rejection as well as the first reported placenta accreta.
ISSN:0002-9378
1097-6868
DOI:10.1016/j.ajog.2020.03.001