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New IVF invention brings more hope to families

Health & Medical

COUPLES undergoing IVF will soon benefit from the next phase a novel treatment option that cultures an embryo in an environment that closely mimics what occurs naturally in a mother during conception.

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Women who have been struggling to start a family for years are finally getting pregnant thanks to a world first in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment, developed by researchers at the University of Adelaide in South Australia.

BlastGen is the next phase of the highly successful EmbryoGen trial. Both EmbryoGen and BlastGen contain a signalling molecule called GM-CSF, which is found naturally in a mother’s uterus.

GM-CSF protects the embryo from stress, making it stronger and more robust in the days following conception.

In the new BlastGen trial, the embryos are cultured for an additional two days (to the blastocyst stage), so that the best embryo can be selected on day five and implanted. In the EmbryoGen method the embryos were cultured for three days.

BlastGen is only available in South Australia and Japan at the moment.

Associate Professor Louise Hull, researcher at the University of Adelaide’s Robinson Research Institute and Fertility Specialist CREI at Fertility SA, is leading the first Australian BlastGen clinical trial.

“By using the BlastGen treatment for IVF, the embryo is being cultured in an environment that closely mimics what occurs naturally in a mother during conception,” Associate Professor Hull Says. “As a result the embryos grow in a more natural environment than they do in traditional IVF treatments.

“So far 20 couples have participated in the BlastGen trial – all of whom have had a lot of IVF treatments, poor embryo development or have suffered miscarriages – and the pregnancy success rate is 43%,” she says.

Michael Barry, Fertility SA Scientific Director, says they are fortunate to be involved in the first human BlastGen trial.

“In the lab we are continuously striving for improvements and BlastGen is giving us the opportunity to make a difference to the way we grow embryos and to help couples who have had a lot of difficulty conceiving,” says Barry.

Professor Sarah Robertson, Director of the Robinson Research Institute, says EmbryoGen and now BlastGen are an example of one the University’s great commercialisation success stories.

“I commenced this research during my PhD 25 years ago, and it’s very exciting to see so many Australian women conceiving and having healthy babies because of this technology,” Professor Robertson says.

“We partnered with a Danish company, Origio A/S, in 2006 to develop EmbryoGen and now hundreds of IVF clinics in more than 40 countries are using this technology,” she says. “I expect BlastGen will be just as successful.”

“This is a great example of how good medical research can translate into a treatment that makes a real difference in people’s lives,” she says. 

This is a Creative Commons story from The Lead South Australia, a news service providing stories about innovation in South Australia. Please feel free to use the story in any form of media. The story sources are linked in with the copy and all contacts are willing to talk further about the story. Copied to Clipboard

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