HealthIVF's New Lab PartnerWhat's going on: Researchers and startups are using artificial intelligence and robotics to automate one of the trickiest parts of in-vitro fertilization (IVF): making embryos. The experimental tech in Mexico City — a robotic system named Aura — has already helped produce at least 20 babies, and companies are racing to scale it. Since the first IVF birth in 1978, 13 million babies have been born through the process. But despite decades of progress, it remains a highly precise, manual task. A trained embryologist has to pick the best sperm from a petri dish and inject it into an egg that’s a fraction of the size of a poppy seed. The process is famously delicate (one reason why IVF works, at best, only half the time). The new push is to replace human variability with consistent, automated precision. What it means: The tech borrows from the same kinds of software that power self-driving cars or scan for early signs of breast cancer. In theory, it could boost success rates, lower costs, and democratize IVF. Of course, it’s still early days for the trials, and none of the companies experimenting with this tech have approval from US regulators. But with one in six people of reproductive age facing infertility — and a single IVF cycle costing as much as $30,000 — experts and investors see potential in automation. And for would-be parents, it could offer a greater chance of building a family. Related: The Rise in Patient-Powered Health Care Is Impossible To Ignore (WSJ) |