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Case Reports
. 2020 Sep-Oct;27(6):1253.
doi: 10.1016/j.jmig.2019.12.007. Epub 2019 Dec 12.

Ovarian Cortex Transplantation

Affiliations
Case Reports

Ovarian Cortex Transplantation

Madeleine Pellerin et al. J Minim Invasive Gynecol. 2020 Sep-Oct.

Abstract

Study objective: To describe a laparoscopic technique for the transplantation of a cryopreserved ovarian cortex.

Design: Educational video.

Setting: University Hospital of Strasbourg, France.

Interventions: A 28-year-old nulliparous woman presented with anaplastic T lymphoma and was then treated with chemotherapy. Before the treatment, the ovarian cortex was collected by laparoscopy to preserve fertility. Remission was achieved, but the patient suffered from premature ovarian failure. At the age of 32 years, she wished to become pregnant. The patient was thus included in the research protocol Development of Ovarian Tissue Autograft in Order to Restore Ovarian Function, and the transplantation site was chosen accordingly. The cortex was stored in liquid nitrogen at -196°C after slow congelation. To restore ovarian function and because of pregnancy desire, we transplanted the cryopreserved ovarian cortex in the right ovary and inside a pocket of the peritoneum of the left ovarian fossa. The first step included adhesiolysis to treat small adhesions developed after the first surgery. On the right, the ovarian cortex was opened by an antimesial incision with cold scissors. The cryopreserved ovarian cortex was placed through the cortex of the right ovary and fixed with stitches. On the left side, the peritoneum of the ovarian fossa was opened, and a subperitoneal pocket was dissected. The cortex was inserted. It was then closed with absorbable sutures or with a hemostatic pad. Six months after her surgery, the patient had natural cycles. We monitored an ovulation of both the sides. She underwent 3 in vitro fertilizations but with failures of embryo transfer. She conceived spontaneously a year after the surgery. She gave birth to a healthy child weighing 3300 g.

Conclusion: For patients who have suffered from premature ovarian failure owing to chemotherapy, ovarian cortex transplantation can restore the ovulatory function, allow in vitro fertilization, and permit, as in our case, a spontaneous pregnancy.

Keywords: Fertility preservation; Ovarian autograft; Pregnancy.

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