TY - JOUR
T1 - Artificial Placenta and Artificial Womb Technologies for Lung and Kidney Failure
T2 - A Holistic Perspective
AU - THE ARTPLAC RESEARCH CONSORTIUM
AU - van Galen, Danny J.M.
AU - Costa, Ana Martins
AU - Siche-Pantel, Franziska
AU - Kemper, Ruth
AU - Rochow, Niels
AU - Brandani, Maria
AU - Halfwerk, Frank R.
AU - Arens, Jutta
AU - Fusch, Christoph
AU - Krapf, Andrea
AU - Payne, Kelly
AU - van Galen, Danny
AU - Stamatialis, Dimitrios
AU - Romano, Lucia
AU - ter Beek, Odyl
AU - Wittberg, Lisa Prahl
AU - El Jirari, Imane
AU - Murphy, Cian
AU - Stenson, Eamonn
AU - O’Grady, Aine
AU - Scott, Ronan
AU - Ewert, Peter
AU - Georgiev, Stanimir
AU - Gendera, Katarzyna
AU - Ophelders, Daan
AU - Wolfs, Tim
AU - Knoll, Thorsten
AU - Haag, Ulrich
AU - Hummler, Helmut
AU - Brash, John
AU - Sask, Kyla
AU - Selvaganapathy, Ravi
AU - Fusch, Gerhard
AU - Pashkuleva, Iva
AU - Eckstein, Stefan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 The Author(s).
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Preterm birth remains the leading cause of mortality among neonates. Despite improvements in neonatal intensive care over the years, current treatments for lung and kidney failure are highly invasive, associated with lifelong disability, and limit family integration. Artificial womb and artificial placenta technologies offer a promising alternative by providing more tailored and less invasive neonatal care. Although these technologies share some similarities, artificial womb and artificial placenta technologies differ significantly in terms of treatment initiation, treatment environment, and the potential to support family-centered care. Moreover, even though acute kidney injury is common in neonatal extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) patients, current artificial placenta and artificial womb devices lack renal support functionality. Most artificial womb and artificial placenta studies focus on the technical feasibility of these technologies based on in-vivo animal tests. However, translation toward envisioned use of these devices in preterm neonates remains mostly underexposed. A comprehensive stakeholder analysis, including parents and caregivers, is critical to the development of socially acceptable artificial placenta and artificial womb systems. This state-of-the-art review provides an overview of conventional neonatal lung and kidney treatments, delineates the differences between artificial womb and placenta technologies, and addresses the technological and ethical challenges in advancing these technologies toward potential clinical implementation.
AB - Preterm birth remains the leading cause of mortality among neonates. Despite improvements in neonatal intensive care over the years, current treatments for lung and kidney failure are highly invasive, associated with lifelong disability, and limit family integration. Artificial womb and artificial placenta technologies offer a promising alternative by providing more tailored and less invasive neonatal care. Although these technologies share some similarities, artificial womb and artificial placenta technologies differ significantly in terms of treatment initiation, treatment environment, and the potential to support family-centered care. Moreover, even though acute kidney injury is common in neonatal extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) patients, current artificial placenta and artificial womb devices lack renal support functionality. Most artificial womb and artificial placenta studies focus on the technical feasibility of these technologies based on in-vivo animal tests. However, translation toward envisioned use of these devices in preterm neonates remains mostly underexposed. A comprehensive stakeholder analysis, including parents and caregivers, is critical to the development of socially acceptable artificial placenta and artificial womb systems. This state-of-the-art review provides an overview of conventional neonatal lung and kidney treatments, delineates the differences between artificial womb and placenta technologies, and addresses the technological and ethical challenges in advancing these technologies toward potential clinical implementation.
KW - artificial placenta
KW - artificial womb
KW - ethics
KW - extracorporeal life support
KW - neonatal care
KW - prematurity
KW - renal failure
KW - respiratory failure
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105003936535&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/MAT.0000000000002443
DO - 10.1097/MAT.0000000000002443
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105003936535
SN - 1058-2916
JO - ASAIO Journal
JF - ASAIO Journal
ER -