Study reports chemical mechanism that boosts enzyme observed in cancer – IU Newsroom

A new study led by scientists at IUPUI and Indiana University Bloomington is the first to describe a biochemical mechanism that increases the activity of a molecule whose presence is observed in many types of cancer.

The molecule, an enzyme called Pif1 helicase, plays a role in many important cellular processes in the body. Tightly regulating this protein is vital to genome stability because too little -- or too much -- activity can influence aging and age-related diseases, primarily cancer. A common cancer therapy, HDAC inhibitors, can also impact the mechanism that regulates this enzyme.

"We're currently giving people drugs that change the acetylation status of the cell without knowing how it affects many proteins that play a role in genome stability," said Lata Balakrishnan, an associate professor of biology in the School of Science at IUPUI, who is co-lead author on the study. "HDAC inhibitors upregulate certain tumor-suppression genes, and thus are used in combination therapies to treat specific cancers, but when it comes to their impact on other parts of the cell, we're basically operating in the dark."

The study's other lead author is Matthew Bochman, an associate professor in the IU Bloomington College of Arts and Sciences' Department of Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry. Other co-authors are Christopher Sausen and Onyekachi E. Ononye, Ph.D. students in Bochman's and Balakrishnan's labs, respectively, at the time of the study.

The effect of lysine acetylation on Pif1 is the mechanism described in the study. Lysine acetylation occurs when a small molecule called an acetyl group binds to lysine, an amino acid used to build common proteins in the body. This action transforms lysine from a positively charged molecule to a neutrally charged molecule. This neutralization can impact protein function, protein stability and protein-protein interaction in cells, among other things.

Helicases are known as the genetic "zippers" of cells because they pull apart DNA for the purpose of genetic replication and repair. They also help maintain telomeres, the structure at the end of chromosomes that shortens as people age.

In the new study, the researchers identified lysine acetylation on Pif1 helicase and showed the addition of the acetyl group increases the protein's activity -- as well as its "unzipping" function. They also found that lysine acetylation changes the shape -- or "conformation" -- of the Pif1 protein. They believe that this shape change increases the amount of Pif1 helicase.

"The dynamic interplay of the addition and removal of the acetyl group on lysine regulates a wide variety of proteins within the cell," Balakrishnan said. "Perturbations to this process can play a role in cancer, aging, inflammatory responses and even addiction-related behaviors."

"As a class, helicases are involved in a lot of processes necessary for genome integrity," Bochman added. "Any significant failure in these processes is generally carcinogenic."

The precise details of lysine acetylation in Pif1, its effect of the enzyme's shape and the resulting impact on helicase activity took nearly five years to observe and report. The study, carried out in parallel on two IU campuses, was made possible by the lead scientists' complementary expertise. As a biochemist who has previously studied lysine acetylation in other proteins, Balakrishnan was able to isolate Pif1 in vitro to observe its response to chemical reactions in a test tube. In contrast, as a geneticist working in yeast as a model organism to study Pif1, Bochman was able to modify cells in vivo to watch reactions play out in a living organism.

"The ability to observe these reactions in a living cell is often more relevant, but it's also a lot messier," Balakrishnan said. "Our experiments were constantly informing each other as to where to go next."

Looking to the future, Bochman said intricate knowledge of cellular processes -- such as lysine acetylation -- will increasingly play a role in personalized therapy.

"If you sequence a patient's tumor, you can fine-tune drugs to target very specific enzymes," he said. "Instead of a drug that broadly affects the whole cell, it will be possible to take a targeted approach that reduces potential side effects. This level of personalization is really the future of cancer biology and cancer medicine."

"Lysine Acetylation Regulates the Activity of Nuclear Pif1" is available online in advance of print in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. A perspective article on the work is also forthcoming in the journal Current Genetics.

This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health and the American Cancer Society.

Indiana University's world-class researchers have driven innovation and creative initiatives that matter for 200 years. From curing testicular cancer to collaborating with NASA to search for life on Mars, IU has earned its reputation as a world-class research institution. Supported by $854 million last year from our partners, IU researchers are building collaborations and uncovering new solutions that improve lives in Indiana and around the globe.

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Study reports chemical mechanism that boosts enzyme observed in cancer - IU Newsroom

Bio-Based Itaconic Acid Market 2020: Product Specification, Growth Drivers ,Applications and Forecast to 2027|Global Market Players- Thermo Fisher…

Market Insights

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Global Veterinary Biochemistry Analyzers Market Size, Comprehensive Analysis, Development Strategy, Future Plans and Industry Growth with High CAGR by…

Global Veterinary Biochemistry Analyzers Market Status (2015-2019) and Forecast (2020-2025) by Region, Product Type & End-Use

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Top key players @ BPC BioSed, DiaSys Diagnostic Systems, Diconex, Heska, Randox Laboratories, Idexx Laboratories, Scil Animal Care, and Woodley Equipment

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5 United States

6 Europe

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15 Appendix

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Global Veterinary Biochemistry Analyzers Market Size, Comprehensive Analysis, Development Strategy, Future Plans and Industry Growth with High CAGR by...

LETTER: Another ‘ball of humor’ – Observer-Reporter

Another Monday, another Dave Ball ball of humor.

Ball rustles around in his closet and pulls out his dusty, defunct, Trump U letter sweater and orange rally pom-pom, and goes about scribbling down his theories. The thing about theories is that there is supporting or refuting data that determines the acceptance of the theory. Stating what one read on their personally chosen internet sites does not make for a data set. In fact, I harken back to the beginning of the worldwide web in the early '90s, when the tagline was, "Don't Believe Everything You Read on the Internet."

I do find considerable amusement that Ball considers himself an emeritus on so many topics politics, neurology, geology, embryology, civil rights, to name just a few. The truly wonderful yet puzzling thing about our always great country is that bloviating egotists get a column a week to spew their particular form of personal belief.

I refer to a line spoken a few years ago: "Don't talk unless one can improve upon the silence."

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LETTER: Another 'ball of humor' - Observer-Reporter

Disputes over when life begins may block cutting-edge reproductive technologies like mitochondrial replacement therapies – Jacksonville…

(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.)

Walter G. Johnson, Arizona State University and Diana Bowman, Arizona State University

(THE CONVERSATION) The nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the U.S. Supreme Court has once again pushed the debate over when life begins into the headlines, which could have far-reaching effects on access to both current and emerging reproductive technologies. In 2006, Judge Barrett was one of the signatories on a newspaper ad sponsored by an anti-abortion group that not only believes life begins at fertilization but also hopes to criminalize discarding extra embryos created during in vitro fertilization.

As legal scholars, weare closely watching how jurisdictions regulate emerging reproductive technologies, including a set of techniques called mitochrondial replacement therapies which can prevent some heritable diseases. But because they use IVF methods, and some (but not all) of the techniques require discarding an embryo, law codifying the belief that life starts at fertilization could restrict access to mitochondrial replacement therapies and derail productive conversations about how to regulate them properly.

Implications for assisted reproduction

Last week, the medical journal Fertility & Sterility ran an editorial arguing that confirming Judge Barrett could result in restrictions not only on reproductive rights to contraception and abortion, but also on IVF. One concern is that future legal decisions could forbid IVF clinics from discarding extra embryos even ones unlikely to start a pregnancy or limit the number of embryos which can be formed. That could raise treatment costs or make efforts to start a healthy pregnancy with IVF much harder.

The nomination of Judge Barrett also comes just as new technologies look almost ready to help parents have children free of certain heritable diseases. Children can inherit mitochondrial diseases from their biological mother (and possibly their father) caused by dysfunctional mitochondria which generate energy molecules for the cell. These tiny structures in the cell carry their own special DNA; but those that carry mutations can cause disease. A new type of reproductive technology called mitochondrial replacement therapies offers the possibility of preventing children from inheriting these diseases.

Mitochondrial replacement therapies

Estimates suggest 1,000-4,000 children in the U.S. alone are born each year with a heritable mitochondrial disease.

These complex diseases can affect many different organs especially those with high energy needs like the brain, eyes or heart. There are no cures and few treatment options exist, so children often die in severe cases. Having a child with mitochondrial diseases can place huge emotional and financial tolls on families, with significant economic costs for health care systems.

With limited treatment options, some experts place more hope in preventing children from inheriting mitochondrial diseases altogether. Sometimes called three parent IVF, mitochondrial replacement therapies make this possible by replacing the unhealthy mitochondria in an egg cell or embryo with healthy ones from a donor woman. Using this technique, couples at high risk of having children with mitochondrial diseases can then have a healthy child who is biologically related to them.

Mitochondrial replacement therapies do, however, raise a few concerns. Health problems could arise from molecular mismatches between the parents nucleus and donor mitochondria or from a treated embryo reverting to an unhealthy state, though these risks are hypothetical for now. And female children born through mitochondrial replacement therapies could, theoretically, pass these conditions to their children.

Because mitochondria carry 37 of their own genes, children born from mitochondrial replacement therapies technically have DNA from three people the couple and the woman who donated her healthy mitochondria. The donor contributes a minuscule amount of DNA less than 1% but this does raise questions about their parenthood. Another concern is that swapping out mitochondria (and their DNA) in embryos makes for a slippery slope to designer babies, especially now that three births have occurred after gene editing.

Regulating mitochondrial replacement therapies

These safety and ethical concerns call for policy to investigate and minimize risks, while answering questions like what the legal status of the third parent should be.

In 2015, the United Kingdom became the first jurisdiction in the world to expressly legalize and regulate mitochondrial replacement therapies, creating a system to license clinics for this service. This move came after an extensive public engagement process. Regulation is overseen by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, which governs all human fertility treatments and research within the U.K. Two other countries, Australia and Singapore, are considering legislative amendments to follow in the U.K.s footsteps.

While brand-new regulatory systems for mitochondrial replacement therapies may seem ideal, lessons learned from other emerging technologies suggest most countries probably wont adopt this approach since existing rules often apply already, though maybe not in an ideal way. The trick then becomes making sure existing rules can still cover concerns with the new technology. However, this reality has led to critics raising the alarm about unregulated mitochondrial replacement therapies, especially since medical tourism is already happening.

Even if most countries dont enact new laws, many already have rules which should apply to mitochondrial replacement therapies. For example, the U.S. wont need a new regulatory system if it removes its current ban on the technology. The Food and Drug Administration already plans on regulating mitochondrial replacement therapies with the same tools it uses for biologics, a broad category of medical products ranging from vaccines to gene therapy.

Mexico got a bad reputation for having no rules after a child was born there via mitochondrial replacement therapies, but legal scholars have pointed out that Mexicos regulations on health research likely prohibit this use of mitochondrial replacement therapies. However, these rules werent triggered because doctors modified the embryos in the U.S., before sending them to Guadalajara for the treatment. Instead, the U.S. FDA intervened, informing the clinic that they had violated U.S. law in several ways.

In Greece, regulators already approved a clinical trial for mitochondrial replacement therapies using their existing rules for fertility treatments although the trial addresses the success of fertility treatments instead of preventing mitochondrial diseases. And in Ukraine, though the details are murky, health officials appear to have similarly approved a clinical trial for mitochondrial replacement therapies.

Moving forward

Reproductive technologies have allowed millions of families around the world to conceive healthy children over the last 42 years. For the first time, recent advances in mitochondrial replacement therapies could allow families who otherwise couldnt have a healthy child of their own to do so. But changes in law that restrict access to IVF could have profound social and medical impacts that would ripple across the country.

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Rather than making reproductive technologies like mitochondrial replacement therapies more difficult to access especially for those with a medical reason for doing so we believe regulators and governments should be looking for ways to provide individuals access to these technologies in a way that promotes safety and efficacy for everyone involved. That includes those living in the U.S. who wish to access mitochondrial replacement therapies in their own country.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: https://theconversation.com/disputes-over-when-life-begins-may-block-cutting-edge-reproductive-technologies-like-mitochondrial-replacement-therapies-146254.

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Disputes over when life begins may block cutting-edge reproductive technologies like mitochondrial replacement therapies - Jacksonville...

Shady Grove Fertility (SGF) Welcomes Reproductive Endocrinologist Selma Amrane, M.D., to the Maryland Medical Team – Benzinga

SGF is honored to have Dr. Selma Amrane join its Towson location, which offers excellence in fertility care to the Baltimore region.

ROCKVILLE, Md. (PRWEB) October 23, 2020

Shady Grove Fertility (SGF) is proud to announce that reproductive endocrinologist, Selma Amrane, M.D., has joined the practices Towson medical team. Dr. Amrane will join Drs. Stephanie Beall, Eugene Katz, Cori Tanrikut, and Ricardo Yazigi, and will begin seeing patients at SGFs Towson location in late November 2020.

Dr. Amrane specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of infertility, including gynecologic endocrine issues, such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), male-factor infertility, and infertility from endometriosis.

"I am most proud of the level of hard work and dedication of each and every team member at SGF," says Dr. Amrane. "I think this has to do with how passionate each team member is about the extraordinary, noble goal of helping patients families grow, and I am proud to be a part of such a talented group."

Dr. Amrane earned her medical degree from University of Maryland, School of Medicine and completed her residency in obstetrics and gynecology at Weill Cornell Medical Center. Following, she completed a 3-year fellowship in reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Columbia University Medical Center.

Dr. Amrane has been an advocate for patient access to fertility treatment and has participated in lobbying on Capitol Hill with organizations such as RESOLVE, the National Infertility Association. She is a member of several professional organizations, including the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) and the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). She has also presented her research on multiple gestation and in vitro fertilization at several national meetings.

"I believe that a little bit of extra time and comfort goes a long way," says Dr. Amrane. "The process of fertility testing and treatment is not easy. I lend an ear to listen and answer all the questions my patients may have so we can provide the best treatment possible in response to their unique experiences."

Patients have access to 12 SGF Maryland locations, with the Towson office offering full-service care including an embryology laboratory, IVF center, and new patient video consults.

"Dr. Amrane brings immense value to our SGF Towson medical team with her extensive knowledge, compassionate care, and fluency in Spanish and French," says Dr. Eugene Katz. "Together, our team will continue to offer the diverse community of Baltimore County access to the most advanced fertility treatment possible."

Patients may schedule an appointment with Dr. Amrane at SGFs Towson location by calling 1-877-761-1967 or submit this brief form. Patients also have access to SGF Towsons unique financial options, such as the 100% refund program for IVF, that help make fertility treatment more affordable.

About Shady Grove Fertility (SGF)

SGF is a leading fertility and IVF center of excellence with more than 85,000 babies born and 5,000+ 5-star patient reviews. With 37 locations throughout FL, GA, MD, NY, PA, VA, D.C., and Santiago, Chile, we offer patients virtual physician consults, deliver individualized care, accept most insurance plans, and make treatment affordable through innovative financial options, including 100% refund guarantees. More physicians refer their patients to SGF than any other center. Call 1-888-761-1967 or visit ShadyGroveFertility.com.

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Shady Grove Fertility (SGF) Welcomes Reproductive Endocrinologist Selma Amrane, M.D., to the Maryland Medical Team - Benzinga

Fifth baby born in Greece using the maternal spindle transfer method as part of pilot trial conducted by the Institute of Life and Embryotools…

ATHENS, Oct. 21, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- A fifth babywas born using the maternal spindle transfer method, as part of the pilot trial conducted by the scientific team of the Institute of Life and Embryotools in Greece,on October14, 2020. In the context of this pilot trial, this method has already led to the birth of 4 more babies, from women with significant fertility problems and a serious history of multiple IVF failures.

The fifth baby was born to a 33 years old Greek mother, who had undergone nine failed IVF cycles in the past. Because of her poor oocytes quality, none of her fertilized oocytes reached the blastocyst stage.

Attending obstetrician/gynecology surgeon Dr. Panagiotis Psathas,issued the following statement: This woman had already a history of 9 failed IVF attempts. The course of the clinical research is optimistic so far. I'm really happy, as a member of the team, for the birth of the 5th baby with the maternal spindle transfer method, in the context of the clinical research conducted by the Institute of Life and Embryotools scientific team.

In a joint statement, Dr. Nuno Costa-Borges, Co-Founder of Embryotools, and Mr. Eros Nikitos, Director of the Institute of Life Embryology Lab, noted:Today is one more very important milestone for our pilot trial, as one more woman with a complex history of failed IVF attempts gave birth to a totally healthy baby with her own genetic material. At the same time, the other 4 children that have been born until now are all well health-wisetoo and are being monitored based on a special pediatric protocol. The medical data of our pilot trial are being enriched everyday with new data arising from the monitoring of the other 25 women which are participating in the clinical research.

About the Maternal Spindle Transfer Pilot Trial

The maternal spindle transfer pilot trial involves mitochondrial replacement in human oocytes, fully preserving the genetic material of the woman who wants to reproduce. In this way, in the context of the pilot trial being carried out by the Institute of Life and Embryotools, the scientific team is researching the potential of addressing the problems of women with fertility issues and multiple IVF failures caused by cytoplasmic dysfunctions of their oocytes, and the potential of addressing serious mitochondrial diseases.

Important Note:

Births of children using the maternal spindle transfer method are performed in the context of an ongoing research protocol concerning a pilot trial that leads to pregnancy, which is conducted in accordance with the terms and conditions of Law 3305/2005. Based on current scientific findings, the maternal spindle transfer method is not an established infertility treatment, nor a recognized method of medically assisted reproduction.

For more information: https://www.iolife.eu/

SOURCE Institute of Life

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Fifth baby born in Greece using the maternal spindle transfer method as part of pilot trial conducted by the Institute of Life and Embryotools...

What is embryo ‘adoption’ and is it available in the UK? – Metro.co.uk

Embryo adoption is not a commonly used term in the UK. What does it mean? (Picture: Getty)

For many, having their own family by biological means is simply not possible.

There is an increasing number of options available to those people, from adoption to surrogacy or egg or sperm donation.

In the US and other countries, the topic of embryo adoption or donation is coming up more and more.

But what does it mean, can you get it here, and what are the benefits of this procedure?

Widely referred to as embryo donation but sometimes adoption this refers to the process of donating, or being a recipient, of an embryo.

Although its sometimes referred to as adoption, this is not a legal or technical term as adoption refers to a live child after birth.

However, some people who have gone through the process refer to it as such, with the US National Embryo Donation Center saying that many parents describe it as giving birth to your adopted child.

As a result, the phrase has slipped into common parlance.

However, the term is contested in the States where it is more common with many scientists saying it should be seen as a medical procedure rather than a form of child adoption.

Experts in the UK resist using the term too, with some claiming it is misleading because the child in question would be carried by their so-called adoptive mother, who would also assume all legal responsibility for them.

Therefore, donation is the more accurate term.

Fiona MacCallum, Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, Warwick University, previously wrote in Bio News: Children conceived through embryo donation do resemble adopted children in that they are reared by two parents with whom they have nogeneticlink.

Significantly though, the situations differ in that the recipient mother in embryo donation is also the gestational mother.

Due to this biological link, embryo donation and adoption differ from each other legally and psychologically.

A spokesperson for the Human Fertilisation & Embryology Authority (HFEA), the UK fertility regulator in the UK told Metro.co.uk: We generally dont use the term embryo adoption in the UK.

If someone donates their leftover embryos to someone elses treatment wed refer to this as embryo donation in the UK, whereas in the US its commonly referred to as embryo adoption.

Embryo donation is available in the UK at licensed clinics.

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Embryo donation is when another couples embryo is implanted in your womb during IVF.

People may decide to donate their embryos if they have frozen embryos after fertility treatments that they decided not to use themselves.

Donating them to give another family a chance is a route many take, rather than discarding them, or donating them to research.

The procedure allows the woman to experience pregnancy herself something which wouldnt be available with options such as adoption.

Embryo donationfollows the same principles as egg or sperm donation. If the embryos are donated through a licensed fertility clinic, the donor wont have any legal responsibility for any children born as a result.

However, under law, donors can not remain anonymous and when they turn 18, anyone conceived with a donor is entitled to ask for their name, date of birth, and last known address.

According to HFEA: In the UK, any patient who has undergone treatment and has embryos left that they dont want to discard, can consider donating them to someone elses treatment, fertility research or training.

We encourage anyone who chooses donation to use a licensed clinic. Clinics are required to screen and test any donation, including donated embryos, for a wide range of infectious diseases and genetic illnesses which offers protection to health of the recipient and future children who may be born. Clinics also ensure that the legal parenthood implications are understood and consented to by donors and recipients.

You can search for clinics that offer embryo donation on the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA)s website.

MORE: Can you put yourself up for adoption?

MORE: What could go against you in the adoption process?

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Adoption Month is a month-long series covering all aspects of adoption.

For the next four weeks, which includes National Adoption Week from October 14-19, we will be speaking to people who have been affected by adoption in some way, from those who chose to welcome someone else's child into their family to others who were that child.

We'll also be talking to experts in the field and answering as many questions as possible associated with adoption, as well as offering invaluable advice along the way.

If you have a story to tell or want to share any of your own advice please do get in touch at adoptionstories@metro.co.uk.

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What is embryo 'adoption' and is it available in the UK? - Metro.co.uk

ESHRE updates its fertility clinic guidance for second wave of infections – ESHRE

New guidance from ESHRE for maintaining safe fertility services during a dramatic spike in COVID-19 case numbers has realigned mitigation steps according to local levels of infection.

As countries throughout the world face up to a second wave of COVID-19 infections, ESHRE and others have upgraded safety guidelines for fertility clinics. ESHRE has reaffirmed its guidance from April on the reopening of clinics after lockdowns (phase 2 of the pandemic), but has now in this latest phase added two further measures as complementary to that April guidance: more testing in addition to the triage questionnaires; and greater information to patients on COVID-19 and its prevention before and during pregnancy.(1)

The new guidance also advises that mitigation measures should be in place depending on the level of infection in a region. Thus, a first core step in this latest guidance is to recognise the current epidemiological status of the pandemic and to assess its likely impact on internal resources (such as staff and equipment) and on patients. The second step is to plan mitigation measures according to that assessment to reduce those risks. A local notification rate of 20 to 60 cases per 100,000 population (moderate impact) might require no further measures than those already applied routinely. However, an area of major (60-120 cases per 100,000) or critical (>120 cases per 100,000) would require more intensive measures such as more routine testing of patients and staff, remote consultations, no accompanying persons, routine use of PPE, and even a freeze-all transfer policy. The measures relative to the case notification rate are set out in clear diagrammatic form in the ESHRE guidance.

The guidance was made public just a few days after the ESHRE COVID-19 working group published its review of resuming fertility services with mitigation measures after the initial flare of the pandemic.(2) The paper describes the measures needed to restart safe routine treatments in fertility clinics and the rationale behind their application. The review (published as an opinion) covers patient selection and informed consent, staff and patient triage and testing, the modification of ART services, treatment planning and a code of conduct. The code of conduct, as set out in ESHREs April guidance on the second phase of the pandemic, remains an important component of this latest guidance on the third phase.

The ASRM, though without the same infection spikes in the USA as seen in Europe, has also updated its COVID-19 recommendations to reaffirm the judicious delivery of reproductive care within a framework of careful preventive measures.(3) With COVID-19 case numbers still running high in the USA, the ASRM describes these measures as critical in managing this ongoing pandemic.

The worry for clinics back in Europe must be whether this second wave of infection becomes so critical in some countries that some centres might have to close once again. However, it now seems clear that the guidance on the resumption of routine treatments provided by ESHRE, the ASRM and other authorities has offered effective protocols for the safe provision of service. The paper from the ESHRE COVID-19 working group just published provides strong point-by-point evidence of that.(2) And it's on this basis that the UKs HFEA, for example, on 13 October reassuringly reported that with such professional guidelines in place a new national closure of fertility clinics should not be necessary. However, as ESHREs latest guidance notes, the HFEA also recognises that staff sickness or patient restrictions may yet force some clinics to close. Its likely that some countries may also requisition hospital beds for intensive care support.

Meanwhile, patients and staff may be further reassured by results from a case report from Spain in which two asymptomatic oocyte donors tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection before egg collection.(4) The eggs were subsequently donated for research for the presence of viral RNA. However, total RNA amplification from single cells of their vitrified-warmed oocytes failed to detect the presence of any viral RNA of SARS-CoV-2 in the cells. The authors thus concluded: Our report suggests that vertical transmission in these women may not occur through their oocytes during treatment, and that handling of this material in the clinical embryology laboratory may not constitute a hazard for healthcare professionals.

However, a meta-analysis just published in Nature Communications of 176 published cases of SARS-CoV-2 infections in neonates has found that the majority of them (around 70%) occurred postnatally, although vertical transmission may be possible in around 30% of the cases, either intrapartum or congenital.(6) Some 9% of these latter cases were actually confirmed as vertical infections. Just over half the infected neonates went on to develop COVID-19, while the rest were asymptomatic. One of the investigators, Daniele De Luca from the Antoine Beclere hospital in Paris, said that it was important for doctors to be aware that neonates can be born with the virus or contract it while in hospital. At the beginning of the pandemic, some argued that this would never touch babies, he reported. Its rare, but it does exist. Breastfeeding seemed not associated with SARS-CoV-2 infections, suggesting that viral transmission through the milk, if any, should be rare.

Further details on COVID-19 and pregnancy, including updates from ongoing registry studies, continue to be provided in detail by the UKs RCOG.(5)

1. See https://www.eshre.eu/covid19wg2. Gianaroli L, Ata B, Lundin K, et al. The calm after the storm: re-starting ART treatments safely in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Hum Reprod 2020; doi.org/10.1093/humrep/deaa285.3. https://www.asrm.org/news-and-publications/news-and-research/?filterbycategoryid=214. Barragan M, Guilln JJ, Martin-Palomino N, et al. Undetectable viral RNA in oocytes from SARS-CoV-2 positive women. Hum Rep[rod 2020; doi.org/10.1093/humrep/deaa2845. https://www.rcog.org.uk/en/guidelines-research-services/guidelines/coronavirus-pregnancy/6. Raschetti R, Vivanti AJ, Vauloup-Fellous C, et al. Synthesis and systematic review of reported neonatal SARS-CoV-2 infections. Nature Communications 2020; 11: 5164.

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ESHRE updates its fertility clinic guidance for second wave of infections - ESHRE

COVID-19 leads to more women freezing their eggs – BioNews

19 October 2020

The number of women considering freezing their eggs has increased, and it may be due to the COVID-19 pandemic

Fertility clinics have seen a sharp rise in the number of women inquiring about egg freezing up to 50 percent more inquiries at some clinics. They have reported that for many of these women,the lockdown has triggered a period of reflection over their parental future, particularly given that opportunities to meet a partner have been greatly reduced.

Kate Davidson from Cheltenham, who is 35 and single, told the Sunday Times: 'A big part of me wanted to do it because I wanted to share my eggs... But I also like the fact that I've got some put away for me now. I was quite reflective about work, life all those things. I think that's what prompted me to make the move.'

'The whole way in which we socialise and date has changed... if I don't meet the man of my dreams until I'm 39, then at least I know I've got the eggs of a 33-year-old' said a woman named only as Katherine, in the same article. 'I just haven't met that person, and with the coronavirus, I felt that it was becoming harder. That was the trigger.'

Compared with last summer, both Create Fertility and The London Women's Clinic have seen consultations for egg freezing rise by 25 percent, while the King's Fertility and Harley Street Fertility Clinics reported risesof 15 and 20 percent respectively.

'Social' egg freezing refers to patients who choose to preserve their fertility for lifestyle rather than medical reasons and is only available privately at an average cost of 3350. A recent report by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority showed that the number of women opting to freeze their eggs or embryos in the UK rose 523 per cent between 2013 and 2018.

Professor Joyce Harper, professor of reproductive science at University College London, said: 'The majority of women who freeze their eggs... are single. When they've been asked, most of them want to have children now, they just haven't met Mr Right or haven't got a partner who is happy to have children.'

Currently, UK law prevents eggs frozen for non-medical reasons to remain in storage for more than ten years. A recent report from the Nuffield Council on Bioethics joined other voices in the field in calling for this limit to be removed (see BioNews 1066).

Sarah Norcross, director of theProgress Educational Trust, the charity which publishes BioNews, said 'With more women than ever choosing to freeze their eggs, it is time for the law to be changed'.

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COVID-19 leads to more women freezing their eggs - BioNews