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Uterus Allo-Transplantation in a Swine Model: Long-Term Graft Survival and Reproductive Function

BACKGROUND: The present study examined the feasibility and safety of allogeneic uterus transplantation (UTx) from a living donor and assessed long-term graft survival and the resumption of reproductive function in a swine model. MATERIAL/METHODS: Ten female miniature swine with regular menstrual cyc...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Xiaoli, Liu, Jiajia, Wu, Qiuxiang, Liu, Zhongyu, Yan, Zhifeng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6262904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30465552
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.913051
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author Zhang, Xiaoli
Liu, Jiajia
Wu, Qiuxiang
Liu, Zhongyu
Yan, Zhifeng
author_facet Zhang, Xiaoli
Liu, Jiajia
Wu, Qiuxiang
Liu, Zhongyu
Yan, Zhifeng
author_sort Zhang, Xiaoli
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The present study examined the feasibility and safety of allogeneic uterus transplantation (UTx) from a living donor and assessed long-term graft survival and the resumption of reproductive function in a swine model. MATERIAL/METHODS: Ten female miniature swine with regular menstrual cycles were used; the animals were either donors or recipients (n=5) depending on the sibling. Retrieval surgery included uterus and uterine arteries together with the anterior branches of the internal iliacs from the living donor; the vaginal canal was cut. After the back-table had been prepared, bilateral internal iliac arteries were anastomosed end-to-side with the external iliac arteries. The transplanted uterus was evaluated based on the arterial blood flow by transabdominal ultrasonography and observed by secondary laparotomy after surgery; estrus recovery was stimulated by mating with a male, and artificial embryo transfer was performed in healing swine. RESULTS: All 5 pigs revealed successful surgery without any surgical complications, injuries to other organs, or unanticipated vascular injury. All recipients survived for >3 months after the surgery, except pig 5, which died due to uterus necrosis 3 days post-surgery. A 100% surgical success rate and 80% long-term survival rate of the receptor were observed. Pig 2 had temporary estrus resumed, and the artificial embryo was transplanted 3 months after surgery; however, apparent gestation was not found by ultrasonography. CONCLUSIONS: This study evaluated the safety and feasibility of the technology of allogeneic UTx, which was performed only by transplant uterine artery system from living-donor surgery in a swine model. Laboratory animals can show long-term survival and resumed estrous after UTx, which can be monitored by ultrasonography to assess the arterial blood flow of the grafted uterus.
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spelling pubmed-62629042018-12-19 Uterus Allo-Transplantation in a Swine Model: Long-Term Graft Survival and Reproductive Function Zhang, Xiaoli Liu, Jiajia Wu, Qiuxiang Liu, Zhongyu Yan, Zhifeng Med Sci Monit Animal Study BACKGROUND: The present study examined the feasibility and safety of allogeneic uterus transplantation (UTx) from a living donor and assessed long-term graft survival and the resumption of reproductive function in a swine model. MATERIAL/METHODS: Ten female miniature swine with regular menstrual cycles were used; the animals were either donors or recipients (n=5) depending on the sibling. Retrieval surgery included uterus and uterine arteries together with the anterior branches of the internal iliacs from the living donor; the vaginal canal was cut. After the back-table had been prepared, bilateral internal iliac arteries were anastomosed end-to-side with the external iliac arteries. The transplanted uterus was evaluated based on the arterial blood flow by transabdominal ultrasonography and observed by secondary laparotomy after surgery; estrus recovery was stimulated by mating with a male, and artificial embryo transfer was performed in healing swine. RESULTS: All 5 pigs revealed successful surgery without any surgical complications, injuries to other organs, or unanticipated vascular injury. All recipients survived for >3 months after the surgery, except pig 5, which died due to uterus necrosis 3 days post-surgery. A 100% surgical success rate and 80% long-term survival rate of the receptor were observed. Pig 2 had temporary estrus resumed, and the artificial embryo was transplanted 3 months after surgery; however, apparent gestation was not found by ultrasonography. CONCLUSIONS: This study evaluated the safety and feasibility of the technology of allogeneic UTx, which was performed only by transplant uterine artery system from living-donor surgery in a swine model. Laboratory animals can show long-term survival and resumed estrous after UTx, which can be monitored by ultrasonography to assess the arterial blood flow of the grafted uterus. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2018-11-22 /pmc/articles/PMC6262904/ /pubmed/30465552 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.913051 Text en © Med Sci Monit, 2018 This work is licensed under Creative Common Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) )
spellingShingle Animal Study
Zhang, Xiaoli
Liu, Jiajia
Wu, Qiuxiang
Liu, Zhongyu
Yan, Zhifeng
Uterus Allo-Transplantation in a Swine Model: Long-Term Graft Survival and Reproductive Function
title Uterus Allo-Transplantation in a Swine Model: Long-Term Graft Survival and Reproductive Function
title_full Uterus Allo-Transplantation in a Swine Model: Long-Term Graft Survival and Reproductive Function
title_fullStr Uterus Allo-Transplantation in a Swine Model: Long-Term Graft Survival and Reproductive Function
title_full_unstemmed Uterus Allo-Transplantation in a Swine Model: Long-Term Graft Survival and Reproductive Function
title_short Uterus Allo-Transplantation in a Swine Model: Long-Term Graft Survival and Reproductive Function
title_sort uterus allo-transplantation in a swine model: long-term graft survival and reproductive function
topic Animal Study
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6262904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30465552
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.913051
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AT wuqiuxiang uterusallotransplantationinaswinemodellongtermgraftsurvivalandreproductivefunction
AT liuzhongyu uterusallotransplantationinaswinemodellongtermgraftsurvivalandreproductivefunction
AT yanzhifeng uterusallotransplantationinaswinemodellongtermgraftsurvivalandreproductivefunction