An Injury
that Treats Infertility
Louis Pasteur
said that "chance favors the prepared mind."
For Prof. Nava Dekel of the Weizmann Institute's Biological
Regulation Department, some completely unexpected results
of biopsies performed on women with fertility problems
have led to a new path of scientific discovery that
may hold hope for women trying to conceive.
Dekel and a research team that includes
Drs. Yael Kalma and Yulia Gnainsky, working in collaboration
with Drs. Amichai Barash and Irit Granot of the Kaplan
Medical Center, had been investigating a protein they
suspected plays a role in the implantation of a fertilized
egg in the uterus -- a crucial and sometimes failure-prone
process. The team took biopsies at several stages in
the menstrual cycles of 12 women with long histories
of fertility problems and unsuccessful IVF treatments
to see if levels of this protein changed over the course
of the cycle.
Indeed, the team's research
went according to plan and they found evidence pointing
to the protein's role. The surprise came soon after:
Of the 12 women participating in the study, 11 became
pregnant during the next round of IVF. The idea of biopsy
incisions, basically small wounds, leading to such a
positive outcome was counterintuitive, and Dekel realized
something interesting was happening. She and her team
repeated the biopsies, this time on a group of 45 volunteers,
and compared the results to a control group of 89 women
who did not undergo biopsy. The results were clear:
The procedure doubled a woman's chances of becoming
pregnant.
On the basis of this and other evidence obtained from
previous studies, the scientists suggest that some form
of mild distress, such as a biopsy, may provoke a response
that makes conditions in the uterus favorable for implantation.
Dekel and her team are now looking for the exact mechanisms
involved when an unreceptive uterus turns receptive
following local injury. They are conducting both animal
studies and human clinical trials to identify genes
that may play a role in this process. In the future,
this accidental finding may give birth to new treatments
to improve the success rate of IVF or even tackle some
types of fertility problems directly.
Source: Invention
Intelligence, July - August 2006