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Prof Guid Oei with an artist’s impression of how the prototype artificial wombs might look.
Prof Guid Oei with an artist’s impression of how the prototype artificial wombs might look. Photograph: Bart van Overbeeke
Prof Guid Oei with an artist’s impression of how the prototype artificial wombs might look. Photograph: Bart van Overbeeke

Artificial womb: Dutch researchers given €2.9m to develop prototype

This article is more than 4 years old

Model from Eindhoven University will surround baby with fluid and deliver oxygen and nutrients via umbilical cord

Attempts to create an artificial womb for premature babies have been given a boost by the award of a €2.9m (£2.6m) grant to develop a working prototype for use in clinics.

The model, which is being developed by researchers at the Eindhoven University of Technology, would provide babies with artificial respiration. However, unlike current incubators the artificial womb would be similar to biological conditions, with the baby surrounded by fluids and receiving oxygen and nutrients through an artificial placenta that will connect to their umbilical cord.

Guid Oei, a professor at the Dutch university and gynaecologist at the nearby Maxima medical centre, said current approaches are problematic as premature babies do not yet have fully developed lungs or intestines – meaning that attempts to deliver oxygen or nutrients directly to such organs can result in damage.

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An artificial womb, Oei said, would be a gamechanger.

“When we put the lungs back under water then they can develop, they can mature, but the baby will receive the oxygen by the umbilical cord, just like in the natural womb,” he said.

The team hope to have a working prototype of their artificial womb ready for use in clinics within five years – meaning it could be a world first. The funding has come from the Horizon 2020 EU programme.

According to the charity Tommy’s, babies born before 22 weeks have almost no chance of survival, while at 22 weeks the chance is only around 10%. But just two weeks later, survival rates rise to about 60%. Oei said that at present, about 1 million babies worldwide die due to prematurity, while those that survive are at risk of a range of disabilities.

In 2017 researchers at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia demonstrated that an artificial womb, known as the “biobag”, could keep alive lambs that were born at the equivalent of 23 weeks of a human pregnancy. Over the weeks they were in the biobags, the lambs continued to develop, turning from bald to fluffy in the process. After being removed from the biobags, the lambs grew up normally.

A lamb (L) at 107 days of gestation (on the fourth day of support) inside the biobag developed in Philadelphia and the same lamb on the 28th day of support. Photograph: Emily A Partridge / Nature communications/CHOP handout/EPA

“The experiments are very important because they show that it is indeed possible to keep an animal alive during four weeks in a kind of liquid-based environment,” said Oei. “But we are working now on the prototype which will really replace the womb for human babies.”

Oei added that he and his colleagues are planning to develop their prototype using 3D printed replicas of human babies that contain a host of sensors, and that the artificial womb will not simply be a plastic biobag, but will recreate the experience of being in the womb – including the sound of the mother’s heartbeat.

“When they are in this environment, they just feel, and see, and smell, and hear the same sounds as when they are in the womb of the mother, he said.

Elizabeth Chloe Romanis, a lawyer at the University of Manchester who has explored the bioethics of artificial wombs, warned that the technology would raise questions – including about which babies it should be tested on, as well as the long-term implications of being gestated in an artificial womb.

“The law treats foetuses and babies very differently, so how does the subject of the artificial womb fit in? Is it possible to turn off the artificial womb, and in what circumstances?” she said, adding that there are also questions about how such a gestation might be viewed by society, particularly if it becomes an alternative to a “natural” pregnancy.

“It is clear that the legal and ethical issues emerging from the technology must be talked about now, in advance of the artificial womb becoming a reality,” she said.

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