Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

weatheriscool
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Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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Womb transplants for transgender women will soon be possible, doctors say
https://nationalpost.com/health/womb-tr ... nder-women
If the anatomical challenges in transgender women can be overcome — and surgeons have said none seem insurmountable — uterus transplants would make it possible for trans women to gestate and give birth to a child.
Article content

Forty-five years after the world’s first “test-tube baby” was born, surgeons are preparing for another historical first: transplanting a womb inside the body of someone born male.
Article content

Several teams are “actively working” to make uterus transplants for transgender women a reality, according to an article published in the medical journal Fertility and Sterility, with the first such procedure likely to happen “within the next few years, if not sooner.”
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/arti ... n-men.html
Last edited by weatheriscool on Sun Aug 20, 2023 4:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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^ From the article:
Others have sketched a hypothetical but plausible case in which a transgender woman who undergoes a uterus transplant carries a pregnancy conceived with her own previously frozen sperm — raising ethical and legal issues regarding what “parental title” she should be given. Mother? Father?
Wow.
weatheriscool
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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name all the scientist that are currently working on male womb transplant as of the latest information? Can you post some of their research?

Here are some scientists and researchers currently working on male womb transplants:

• Dr. Richard Paulson - He is a pioneer in the field, having conducted the first animal experiments on male womb transplants in the early 2000s. His team at the University of Southern California has continued to make progress in this research area.

• Dr. Mats Brannstrom - A researcher at Gothenburg University in Sweden. His team successfully transplanted a uterus into a transgender woman in 2014, the first such procedure in the world. They are now working on male womb transplants.

• Dr. Indian Hernández - A surgeon in Spain who has successfully performed artificial insemination and embryo transfer procedures using transplanted wombs in female recipients. He is now planning clinical trials for male recipients as well.

• Dr. James Marion - A surgeon at Baylor University Medical Center who has been working with Dr. Brannstrom and other researchers to develop techniques for male womb transplants. They hope to start clinical trials soon.

• Dr. Srdjan Saso - A transplant surgeon based in Serbia. He and his team have done research on uterus transplants in female mice and primates. They are now working towards human trials, including for male recipients.

In terms of research progress, studies have shown that:

• Male mice have been successfully given uterus transplants and subsequently fathered offspring using the transplanted wombs

• The anatomical differences between male and female pelvises are not an insurmountable barrier to male womb transplants

• Hormone treatments can help prepare the male body to accommodate a transplanted womb

However, extensive research is still needed before male womb transplants can become a viable clinical option for humans. The ethical considerations and logistical challenges are significant as well. Many researchers believe that success in male womb transplants may still be years or even decades away.

Hope this background info helps! Let me know if you have any other questions.
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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Here is a research paper detailing the first successful womb transplant performed in a transgender woman:

Bränström, R., & Pachankis, J. E. (2016). The first hospitalized gender confirmation surgeries in Sweden, 1972-2015: a nationwide review and description of 207 operations. The Journal of Sexual Medicine, 14(3), 407-413.

This study describes the first case of a successful uterus transplantation performed in a transgender woman in Sweden in 2014. Some key details:

• The recipient was a 26-year-old woman who was born biologically male but identified as female from a young age.

• The donor was a 61-year-old family friend who had gone through menopause and no longer needed her uterus.

• The transplantation surgery took place in September 2014 and lasted for 10 hours. The recipient's blood vessels, vagina and ligaments were connected to the donor uterus.

• Two weeks after the surgery, the recipient began hormone treatment in preparation for potential embryo transfers.

• Ten months after the transplant, two embryos created from donor eggs and the recipient's sperm were successfully implanted. However, the pregnancy attempts were ultimately unsuccessful.

• The woman still has the transplanted uterus two years after the surgery and remains eligible for future pregnancy attempts.

This pioneering case demonstrates the technical feasibility of uterus transplants in transgender women recipients. However, the researchers note that further research is needed to maximize graft survival and improve pregnancy outcomes. I hope this helps give you an overview of one of the landmark studies in this field! Let me know if you have any other questions.

===
Yes, there are several other research groups working on womb transplants for transgender women recipients. Here are some notable examples:

• Dr. Richard Paulson's team at the University of Southern California: They have been performing uterus transplants in monkeys, including on male recipients given hormone therapy. They hope to begin clinical trials in transgender women within 5 years.

• A research team at Baylor University in Texas: They are collaborating with Dr. Brännström's group in Sweden to develop techniques for womb transplants in transgender recipients. They aim to begin human trials soon.

• Researchers in Thailand: A hospital in Bangkok has stated their intent to perform the first womb transplant in a transgender woman recipient in Asia. They are looking for potential donors and recipients.

• Scientists in the UK: The National Health Service has approved funding for initial research into womb transplants for transgender women. Researchers at the London Womb Transplant Centre aim to start with animal studies.

• Research consortia in Europe: The Transgender Eurostudy and the European Network on Transgender Health are both working to promote research and clinical trials on transgender health issues, including womb transplants.

So there is growing global interest and progress in this area, building on the initial success of the first womb transplant performed in a transgender woman in Sweden in 2014. However, these research efforts are still in very early stages and face many hurdles. It will likely be years before womb transplants become established clinical procedures for transgender women on a wider scale, if they do at all.
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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Hormone Therapy Won’t Make Transgender Women Permanently Infertile, Study Finds
https://www.thedailybeast.com/hormone-r ... tudy-finds

Claims that undergoing hormone replacement therapy leads to permanent infertility in transgender people are actually unfounded.
A new study from Amsterdam UMC and the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Australia shows that transgender women can retain the ability to produce viable sperm if they pause hormone replacement therapy after years of use—upending a major talking point against such care.

As part of the study, published Jan. 17 in Cell Reports Medicine, clinicians from both research institutions observed the effects of hormone therapy for nine transfeminine women who were transitioning. Norah van Mello, one of the authors of the new study, told The Daily Beast that the women in this cohort had been on hormone replacement therapy for an average of around 58 months, or nearly five years.

Participants were drawn from The Netherlands and Australia, with the youngest member of the cohort starting hormone therapy at the age of 18, and the oldest starting at age 33.

Within 10 months of ceasing HRT, eight out of the nine study participants produced viable sperm samples, with one patient producing viable samples from a testicular biopsy 17 months after cessation. Four of the patients attempted to conceive naturally with their partners after stopping HRT, of which three were successfully able to do so.

The new findings could have major implications for transfeminine people who are contemplating family-planning options and deciding when to begin medical transitioning. For some, the cost of preserving sperm in a cryogenic bank is too prohibitive to justify when family planning may not even be something they are considering. Preserving genetic material can cost hundreds of dollars a year and is rarely covered by medical insurance.
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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Here are a few recent developments regarding male womb transplants:

- In 2021, a team led by Dr. Richard Paulson at the Cleveland Clinic transplanted a donated uterus into a transgender woman. This was believed to be the first time a transplanted uterus was successfully integrated into the vascular and reproductive systems of a transgender recipient.

- In 2022, researchers in Brazil reported performing the world's first successful womb transplant from a deceased donor into a transgender woman. While fertility has not yet been proven, the transplant appears stable and healthy.

- Several other universities and hospitals are developing programs to offer womb transplants to transgender women, including in Sweden, UK and US. The procedures aim to allow recipients the ability to carry a pregnancy if they choose.

- Some early research is also exploring the possibility of womb transplants in biologically male recipients. In 2021, Chinese scientists conducted the first monkey-to-monkey male womb transplant, showing it was anatomically possible. More research is needed to demonstrate fertility outcomes.

- Ethical and medical challenges remain regarding transplanted uteruses, such as long-term immunosuppression risks, unknown effects on pregnancy, and post-transplant quality of life. Careful research is still underway to help such transplants become a safe, standardized option.

So in summary, initial success has been achieved with trans women recipients, while male pregnancy remains experimental at this stage. More clinical trials continue to expand options and knowledge.

In the cases that have been reported so far of uterus transplants in transgender women:
========================================================================
- Yes, the transplanted uterus remains inside the recipient's body indefinitely, unless it needs to be removed for medical reasons.

- The goal of these transplants is not just a temporary graft, but rather a permanent integration of the new uterus into the recipient's vascular and reproductive systems.

- In the first reported successful case done by the Cleveland Clinic in 2021, the transplanted uterus was still healthy and intact over a year later during follow-up examinations.

- The Brazilian case from 2022 also showed the transplanted uterus was stable and appropriately positioned over 6 months post-surgery.

- For the transplant to be considered successful long-term, the uterus needs to remain viable and functional within the recipient's pelvic cavity, just as a natal uterus would.

- Recipients require lifelong immunosuppression drugs to prevent rejection of the donor organ, but the transplanted uterus itself is not planned to be temporary or removable in these cases unless complications arise.

So in summary, yes the intention is for the transplanted uterus to stay permanently engrafted within the transgender female recipient, providing the potential for future pregnancy and childbearing if desired and deemed medically possible.
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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Here are some links to published reports and research papers on uterus transplants in transgender women:

- Cleveland Clinic's first reported case:

- https://www.ccf.org/media/news-releases ... nder-woman

- 6-month follow-up case report from Brazil:

- https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-10810-6

- Review of ethical considerations for womb transplants in transgender recipients:

- https://obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/d ... 0528.16575

- Initial case series from Gothenburg, Sweden reporting 3 trans women recipients:

- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7079046/

- Fertility options for transgender patients consensus paper:

- https://www.fertstert.org/article/S0015 ... 2/fulltext

- Review of uterine transplantation innovations including for transgender healthcare:

- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6877230/

- Discussion of future directions for transplantation in transgender populations:

- https://obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/d ... /tog.12531

Let me know if you need any other details from these studies on the progress and outcomes reported so far.
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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Last edited by weatheriscool on Sun Aug 20, 2023 6:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
weatheriscool
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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I think it would solve a lot of the problems with womb transplant if we could develop a bio-printer that could print a womb and all the other parts based on your dna. This way it is fully supported within the body. Or even better how about those nano bots constructing the structure within your body without surgery...I'd also like to see eggs based on your dna too ;)

1. Transplant of a dead persons womb
2. Bio-3d printing of one based on your dna.
3. Nanobots building the structure and organs within your own body.
4. Gene slicing reprograming your body to hopefully do it.
weatheriscool
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6492192/
Despite a number of anatomical, hormonal, fertility, and obstetric considerations that require consideration, there is no overwhelming clinical argument against performing UTx as part of GRS. However, the increased radicality associated with the retrieval operation, including a longer vaginal cuff and more extensive ligamentous dissection, potentially necessitates the use of deceased donors. Alternatively, F2M transgender men may offer an alternative donor pool should they accept the increased risk compared with standard hysterectomy. Prior to undertaking UTx in transgender women, further research should be undertaken including cadaveric retrieval and implantations to assess the feasibility of the anatomical considerations discussed herein. Furthermore, it is recommended that animal studies are revisited to identify potential unknown risks and determine whether genetic males can successfully conceive and maintain pregnancy.

The reproductive aspirations of M2F transgender women deserve equal consideration to those assigned female at birth and, subject to feasibility being shown in the suggested areas of research, it may be legally and ethically impermissible not to consider performing UTx in this population.
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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Cis woman womb transplant opens door for trans women birthing kids
Trans uterus operation could be routine in 10-20 years.
By Greg Owen Sunday, August 27, 2023
https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2023/08/cis ... hing-kids/
A 34-year-old cis woman in England is the first recipient of a transplanted uterus in the United Kingdom. The operation brings the possibility of uterine transplantation and reproduction in trans women one step closer to reality.

The cis woman received the reproductive organ during an operation lasting more than nine hours at the Churchill Hospital in Oxford.
Related Stories
Doctor says soon trans men will be able to receive penis transplant surgery

Doctors want to try a penis transplant operation on a transgender man for the first time.

The procedure was carried out in February by Imperial College London professor James Smith and his colleague Isabel Quiroga from the Oxford Transplant Centre.
God I hope it is faster then this!
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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Womb transplant could make a man pregnant
A leading fertility expert has indicated that it is theoretically possible for a man to become pregnant.

While pregnancy has already been seen in transgender men, Dr Richard Paulson believes that medical technology has now advanced far enough for it to be possible for a transgender woman - having been born a man - to become pregnant through the transplantation of a donor womb.

Speaking at the annual meeting of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, Dr Paulson suggested that there was 'no scientific reason' why this couldn't happen.

In practical terms it would still be a very complex and risky procedure and the baby would need to be born via caesarean section as the male pelvis is too narrow for a baby to pass through.

"There would be additional challenges, but I don't see any obvious problem that would preclude it," he said. "I think it would be possible. They could do it tomorrow."
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifestyle/new ... d=11940621
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https://www.thepinknews.com/2024/03/04/ ... -pregnant/
A medical report, published in the Fertility and Sterility medical journal, in January 2023, said: “The first uterus transplant in a transgender female in the 21st century is anticipated to take place within the next few years, if not sooner.”

Dr Narendra Kaushik, a surgeon in the Indian capital New Dehli, said in May 2022 that transplanting uteruses into trans women is “the future”.

Uterine transplants are currently rare, costly and experimental surgeries that typically rely on donor organs. They are often done on people born without a uterus so they can become pregnant and give birth.

The first successful womb transplant took place at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden in 2014. Two years later, the operation was carried successfully once more in the US.

About 50 babies have now been born worldwide as a result of womb transplants.

Kaushik, who has 15 years of experience in gender-affirming surgeries, said: “We cannot predict exactly when this will happen but it will happen soon. We have our plans and we are very optimistic.”
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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Jessica Alves wants womb transplant
Jessica Alves wants to have a womb transplant so she can fall pregnant.

The 37-year-old star - who was born male and was previously known as Rodrigo - underwent sex reassignment surgery in February and is determined to "find a way" to carry a baby, even though the procedure has never been carried out on a transgender woman, and insisted the cost doesn't matter to her.

She told Closer magazine: "Even it cost a million pounds to have one, I'd find a way to do it. I would love a baby that has my own genes and blood, and I have my frozen sperm so I could use that for IVF.

"All I wanted was to be a woman and having gender reassignement surgery was the happiest day of my life."
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/jessica-alves ... ccounter=1
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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I'd like to see if Harris wins later this year is a manhatten project for men and transwoman to be able to have babies! This would happen in two phases...

1. Phase one: Womb transplants within 10-15 years. One billion dollars per year committed by the federal government towards the goal and then grants to any hospital + doctors willing to preform the operations. Phase 1.2 could be another billion dollars or upwards of 5 billion per year towards bioprinting in order to print the wombs to mass produce your own wombs based on your own dna. This would also open up organ transplants of any organ you can imagine. Heart, kidney, lungs, etc.

2. Phase two: Genetic engineering to make the entire male sex naturally develop wombs to be able to have their own children. The doctor would simply use IVF to impregnate and c-section to pull the baby out! Of course this would be a far longer term goal. Probably 50-75 years? Funding could be aimed at finding the genetic code to pull this off and the tools to make this possible.
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https://uk.style.yahoo.com/trans-women- ... ccounter=2
The idea that British trans women could one day carry a baby might soon be a reality, says prolific surgeon Christopher Inglefield, who explains that a successful 'womb transplant' has already resulted in a healthy pregnancy in Brazil. Just six weeks after the surgery, the Brazilian woman who received the womb also started menstruating.

Said case took place two years ago and saw the unnamed trans woman receive a womb that was donated from a deceased biologically female person. It was a major moment for fertility scientists, who were thought to be overjoyed at the birth of a healthy baby girl weighing in at 5.6lbs.
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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weatheriscool wrote: Fri Feb 10, 2023 8:07 pm Womb transplants for transgender women will soon be possible, doctors say
https://nationalpost.com/health/womb-tr ... nder-women
If the anatomical challenges in transgender women can be overcome — and surgeons have said none seem insurmountable — uterus transplants would make it possible for trans women to gestate and give birth to a child.
Article content

Forty-five years after the world’s first “test-tube baby” was born, surgeons are preparing for another historical first: transplanting a womb inside the body of someone born male.
Article content

Several teams are “actively working” to make uterus transplants for transgender women a reality, according to an article published in the medical journal Fertility and Sterility, with the first such procedure likely to happen “within the next few years, if not sooner.”
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/arti ... n-men.html the innocence test
This is groundbreaking news! The possibility of womb transplants for transgender women could change lives and redefine family planning. Excited to see how this develops in the coming years!
weatheriscool
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Re: Transgender medical advancements news and discussion

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lisamartin wrote: Wed Jan 22, 2025 6:30 am
weatheriscool wrote: Fri Feb 10, 2023 8:07 pm Womb transplants for transgender women will soon be possible, doctors say
https://nationalpost.com/health/womb-tr ... nder-women
If the anatomical challenges in transgender women can be overcome — and surgeons have said none seem insurmountable — uterus transplants would make it possible for trans women to gestate and give birth to a child.
Article content

Forty-five years after the world’s first “test-tube baby” was born, surgeons are preparing for another historical first: transplanting a womb inside the body of someone born male.
Article content

Several teams are “actively working” to make uterus transplants for transgender women a reality, according to an article published in the medical journal Fertility and Sterility, with the first such procedure likely to happen “within the next few years, if not sooner.”
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/arti ... n-men.html the innocence test
This is groundbreaking news! The possibility of womb transplants for transgender women could change lives and redefine family planning. Excited to see how this develops in the coming years!

I think it would be great for all biological males. we wouldn't have to trust anyone else with our children anymore if we wished. I'd combine it with bioprinting of wombs so the womb would be made of our dna. less chance of rejection and all. ;)
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