Freezing ovaries to delay menopause has been labelled a “nonsensical, money-making exercise”, but some women are doing it anyway
AUK company that is charging women thousands of dollars to put their ovaries on ice in the hope of delaying menopause has been hammered by Australian IVF experts.
ProFam, a UK company established by IVF expert Professor Simon Fishel, claims that the medical procedure could delay menopause by up to 20 years.
The company received media coverage in The Guardian, Channel 7 and BBC radio this week.
But Australian IVF experts are flabbergasted by the company’s expensive and ethically questionable service.
“I think it’s nonsensical,” Dr Alex Polyakov, the clinical director of Melbourne IVF at Royal Women’s Hospital, told The Medical Republic.
“It’s a pure money-making exercise. It makes no physiological sense whatsoever.”
The controversial service involves removing ovarian tissue laparoscopically in younger women, freezing that tissue for decades, thawing it out and then re-implanting it under the skin around the time of menopause.
The hope is that the defrosted ovarian tissue will start functioning and produce hormones that will delay the onset of menopause.
One of the obvious problems with this approach was that thawed ovarian tissue had a short “lifespan” once implanted, Dr Polyakov said.
The ovarian tissue “might function for one to three months but it never functions for 20 years”, Dr Polyakov said.
Defrosted ovarian tissue produces exactly the same oestrogen and progesterone hormones as hormone replacement therapy (HRT), “so, I don’t quite understand what the point [of this procedure] is.”
This medical procedure would require at least two surgeries costing thousands of dollars each. Women would have to pay for the cost of freezing the tissue for decades, which amounts to around $500 per year, he said.
And, at best, the whole process would produce exactly the same outcome as HRT. “It’s the same as taking the pills,” Dr Polyakov said.
The company is offering the service for women up to the age of 40, but ovarian tissue is more likely to be successful at producing hormones if it’s frozen when a woman is in her 20s.
The suggestion that “a 25-year old undergo a $20,000 procedure and potentially lose some of her own natural fertility in the hope that maybe someday she could have it put back to prevent her from needing to take tablets for a few years just seems absurd,” Dr Devora Lieberman, a gynaecologist and fertility specialist based in Sydney, said.