Over 40 new patients have registered at the Pune hospital where India’s first uterus transplant was performed.
The Galaxy Hospital says it has patients lined up from across India, with some even from London and Ireland keen on getting the transplant immediately.
But given the minuscule success rate worldwide, and the first two patients yet to cross the 21 day rejection period, is signing on new patients a good idea? Or even ethical?
After two weeks, both the patients are now recovering and their bodies have shown no sign of rejection of the foreign organ.
Dr Sailesh Puntambekar, who led the surgery, sounds confident.
Both patients, one from Maharashtra and the other from Gujarat, couldn’t conceive naturally.
One of them, due to a missing uterus in her body, and the other due to several abortions and failed pregnancies. Adoption and surrogacy weren’t really options for them.
For Dr Shailesh Puntambekar and his team of 14 doctors, it’s a massive achievement.
While the first step of the transplant is over, that wait for the child of her own will take a while.
Out of the 25 surgeries conducted worldwide, only 11 transplant cases have been successful, with the uterus not showing any signs of rejection. And out of these 11, only 6 cases have successfully delivered a baby.
Given this scenario, is it even right for the hospital to take in new patients?
The doctors in Pune say that each patient will go through a detailed process including psychological counseling, medical tests and clearances at a governmental committee level before they are cleared for surgery.
But till a successful birth happens through this method in India, signing on new patients or calling it a success is risky.
(Prachee Kulkarni has worked as a broadcast journalist for the last 8.5 years. She was previously associated with Ibn Lokmat and can be reached @prachikulkarni)
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