How fibroids deny many women motherhood
Health & Science
By
Gardy Chacha
| Jul 20, 2025
Janet Chepkemei*, from Kitale, got married in 2012. She expected that she would be a mother in the next year.
“Failing to conceive in two years raised an alarm for me,” she says.
Chepkemei visited a gynaecologist who put her through several tests and scans.
“That’s when I was told that I had fibroids – many of them,” she says.
Dr Kireki Omanwa, a fertility expert, says: “Fibroids are a major cause of infertility among women. Out of every 10 women that come to Frontline Medical Consultants with a fertility issue, about three are being held back from motherhood by fibroids.”
READ MORE
How African volunteers are helping shape AI through Wikipedia
KTDA appoints Francis Miano acting CEO
Trump tariff threat casts long shadow over Kenya-Iran trade
World Bank unlocks Sh5.5b green fund for local SMEs
Kenya secures landmark zero-duty trade deal with China
Motorists miss bigger cut in fuel costs despite drop in pump prices
Kenya trade strategy with Iran at crossroad over Trump's warning
KNCCI opens office in Dubai to curb export losses
Msossi App set to launch in Kenya to tackle food waste and losses
How exactly do fibroids cause infertility?
“First, if one has intramural fibroids (in the muscle of the womb), they stretch the uterus to the extent of blocking the fallopian tubes. This would prevent fertilisation of the egg.
“Sometimes a fibroid could be dangling in the cavity of the womb. This blocks sperm from accessing the womb and swimming to where they are needed for fertilisation to take place,” Dr Omanwa says.
The doctor says it is possible for fertilisation to take place even when a woman has fibroids. After fertilisation, the embryo has to implant inside the walls of the uterus.
“An embryo is microscopic. Therefore, the presence of submucosal fibroids projecting into the uterine cavity, even one-centimetre-long, would feel like Mt. Everest for the embryo to circumvent and find a suitable site for implantation,” he says.
In some cases, a woman will have successful fertilisation and implantation. However, due to fibroids, they will lose the pregnancy.
“This is actually my story. It’s exactly what happened to me,” says Catherine Muya.
In 2016, after 10 weeks of pregnancy, Catherine suffered a miscarriage. Shortly afterwards, she was diagnosed with fibroids.
“I had surgery in 2017. I gave birth to my daughter, my first child, in 2018,” she says.
In 2022, she started trying for baby number two. She got pregnant and, unfortunately, lightning struck the second time: “I lost that pregnancy too.”
On further tests, her doctor informed her that not only had the fibroids grown back, they were many than before.
“I had a second surgery to remove them in 2023. In 2024, I gave birth to my son, my second child,” she says.
Chepkemei underwent surgery to remove the fibroids in 2018. However, she is yet to be lucky. But hope should never be lost, Dr Omanwa says.
“If fibroids are the only challenge for a couple struggling with infertility, in the hands of the right specialists, there is close to a 100 per cent chance that they can achieve a successful pregnancy and become parents.”