A scientific first has seen a baby born after a mother’s immature eggs were developed in a lab, frozen and implanted in her years later.
The mother, a then 29-year-old French woman, has eggs taken by fertility doctors before she started chemotherapy for breast cancer.
However, there was not enough time for her to be given ovarian stimulation hormones to help her produce mature eggs that could be frozen.
Instead, the experts removed seven immature eggs from her ovaries and used a technique called in vitro maturation (IVM) to help them to develop further in the laboratory.
They were later implanted in her and her health baby boy, named Jules, was born in summer 2019.
They say the case offers hope to women who would like to have children after a cancer diagnosis, but for whom ovarian stimulation is hazardous.
The method also avoids the risk of “re-seeding the cancer”, which can happen in some cancers when ovarian tissue is later transplanted back into a cancer patient.
Until now, there have been no successful pregnancies in cancer patients after eggs that have undergone IVM and then been frozen, although some children have been born as a result of IVM followed by immediate fertilisation and transfer to the patient without freezing.
Professor Michael Grynberg, head of the Department of Reproductive Medicine and Fertility Preservation at the Antoine Beclere University Hospital, near Paris, said: “We were delighted that the patient became pregnant without any difficulty and successfully delivered a healthy baby at term.
“My team and I trusted that IVM could work when ovarian stimulation was not feasible.”
He added: “This success represents a breakthrough in the field of fertility preservation.”
The case has been outlined in a letter in the cancer journal Annals of Oncology.
After maturing, the eggs were then frozen by vitrification, which freezes the eggs very rapidly in liquid nitrogen to reduce the chances of ice crystals forming and damaging the cell.
Five years later, when the woman had recovered from her cancer, she discovered the treatment had left her infertile.