LONDON (AP) — Since the first test-tube baby was born more than three
decades ago, in vitro fertilization has evolved into a highly
sophisticated lab procedure. Now, scientists are going back to basics
and testing a simpler and cheaper method.
In the West, many
would-be parents spend thousands of dollars for IVF, which involves
pricey incubators and extensive screening. But European and American
scientists say a simplified version of the entire procedure aimed at
developing countries could be done for about 200 euros ($265) with
generic fertility drugs and basic lab equipment that would fit inside a
shoebox.
"IVF is made to sound complicated, but the fact is that
the early embryo is not very demanding," said Jonathan Van Blerkom, a
fertility expert at the University of Colorado.
A human embryo doesn't need much beyond some basic solutions, a steady pH level and constant temperature, he said.
The
simpler approach calls for women to take cheaper fertility tablets to
stimulate their ovaries to release more than one egg per month. In
conventional IVF, expensive, potent drugs that are injected can produce
more than 20 eggs.
Van Blerkom developed the simplified technique
after European colleagues asked him how IVF could be done in developing
countries.
"My first reaction was, 'You've got to be kidding,'" he said.
But
with two test tubes and special solutions, "it's possible to generate
the exact same conditions, or very similar, to what people are
generating in a $60,000 incubator."
One test tube is used to
prepare a solution including carbon dioxide, which creates the ideal
conditions for fertilization. That's piped into a second tube, where one
egg and a few thousand sperm are added, before being placed in a
heating block. After about two to three days, any resulting embryo is
examined under a microscope before being transferred into the woman.
Van
Blerkom and colleagues estimated that about half of all people seeking
infertility treatment could potentially be helped by the method. Those
who have complicated infertility problems, like men with severe sperm
problems or women with very few eggs left, will still need standard IVF.
In
an ongoing trial in Belgium, researchers are comparing the techniques.
Women under 36 seeking IVF for the first time are given a mild dose of
injectable fertility drugs. If at least eight eggs are retrieved, half
undergo traditional IVF, and half use the simpler method.
A specialist who doesn't know which technique was used picks the best-looking embryo to be transferred.
For
the more than 100 women treated so far, the pregnancy rate was about 34
percent for both methods. So far, 14 babies have been born using the
simplified method and 13 babies from traditional IVF.
The World Health Organization estimates there are between 120 and 160 million couples struggling with infertility worldwide.
"Nobody
thinks that infertility in developing countries is a problem, but it is
an even bigger problem there than in (the West)," WHO reproductive
health expert Sheryl Vanderpoel said.

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