A
Texas couple hoped to make history by delivering the first baby in the United
States using a donor uterus. The procedure was part of an experimental program
at the Cleveland Clinic. But a common fungal infection caused the surgery to
fail unexpectedly only a few hours after Lindsey McFarland was introduced as
the patient.
Courtesy of Blake
McFarland
Blake, left, and Lindsey McFarland after the
transplant surgery. "It's been really encouraging to see all the support
from our family and from the doctors and nurses," Blake McFarland told NBC
News. "The best experience about it is how much God has looked out for
us."
In
their first television interview since the transplant surgery, the couple —
Lindsey, 26, and her husband Blake McFarland — spoke of the "emotional
roller coaster" of the long, complicated process, their heartbreaking
disappointment after losing the organ, and what's next for their family.
"There
are days when I'm happy, and then there's days where I'm kind of mad, and then
days where I'm sad," Lindsey McFarland told NBC News. "Everyone has
said that that's normal."
Lindsey
McFarland was still sedated when doctors told her husband they had no choice
but to remove the organ.
"You
lose more than just the uterus. You lose a lot of the hopes and dreams that you
had for the future," Blake McFarland said.
On
April 8, Cleveland Clinic doctors identified why
the transplant failed, just two weeks after the historic surgery. It was a
Candida infection, a common microbe that affects millions of women, which
"compromised the blood supply to the uterus, causing the need for its
removal," the clinic said in a statement.
complications
Lindsey
McFarland was born without a uterus, but she always hoped to experience
childbirth. The couple are already parents — they have three adopted boys. But
the clinical trial in Cleveland seemed like an answer to her dreams of getting
pregnant.
As
part of the program, she had already undergone in vitro fertilization (IVF)
treatment. After a year of being monitored with the donor uterus inside her,
doctors would implant the couple's embryos.
In early March,
hours after the transplant was announced at a press conference, McFarland
noticed bleeding from her incision and was taken to surgery to repair it.
During the procedure, doctors discovered the fungal infection had stopped blood
flow to the uterus and caused life-threatening complications involving her
artery.
"So they had
to remove it to protect my health," McFarland told NBC News.
When she awoke,
her husband Blake was with her in the intensive care unit. It was a major
setback for the program and an emotional shock for the McFarlands.
"It's going
to be a while before I work through everything just because I had such high
hopes," Lindsey McFarland said.
A week after the removal, another
complication with her artery caused loss of blood flow to her leg — and more
surgery. Because of the second complication, Lindsey is not eligible for
another transplant. The trial, which involves nine more women, will continue
once doctors have studied her case.
"We
would not proceed with another transplant until we have come up with a clear
understanding of how this infection occurred and a clear solution to avoid it
from happening [again]," OB-GYN surgeon Dr. Tammaso Falcone, chairman of
the Cleveland Clinic Transplant Center, told NBC News.
No regrets
As
the McFarlands plan to return to their family in Texas, they have a new dream:
Lindsey McFarland's mother has offered to be a surrogate, using their embyros
from the IVF.
"We're
going to take a few years to focus on our boys and me build up strength and get
back to normal," McFarland said. "Then we'll start the process. So
we're excited."
Courtesy of Blake
McFarland
The McFarlands
have no regrets. They are grateful for her recovery and looking forward to
seeing their sons again.
"We had the
mindset at the beginning that, even if something happens and we lose the
uterus, or it just doesn't work out, then we can always say that we gave it a
shot and that even if they just learn something from her procedure, that it was
a success," Blake McFarland said.
Lindsey McFarland
is hopeful for the other women still in the program who may benefit.
"Infertility
... is a journey most people don't understand unless they've dealt with
it," she said. "So I think it's amazing that science has come so far
to provide families and couples with an opportunity like this to build their
family."
and what do i say to this wonderful woman "rejoice you made it being alive is the most important, thanks for your courage and lesson you have taught women" we pray that your health remain stable.
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