The world’s first test-tube baby was born in 1978, and for that breakthrough Robert Edwards, PhD, emeritus professor of human reproduction at the University of Cambridge and the developer of in vitro fertilization (IVF), was awarded a Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2010. But since that major advance, there have been only incremental changes in the field of assisted reproductive medicine, and only modest improvements in the success rate of IVF, which is 20% for women age 38 to 40 and 5 to 10% for women age 41 and older.
At the same time, demand for assisted reproductive technologies has grown. In the US, seven million couples struggle with infertility, and in developed countries across the world, 10% of women...
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