A woman suffering a chromosome disorder has given birth to a healthy daughter thanks to an ovarian transplant from her sister in a world first, doctors said Saturday.

The baby, named Victoria, was born in the Paris region on March 8, and is free of the disorder known as which affects both her mother and her aunt.

Karine Thiriot, 39, said she had been trying to conceive, notably through in vitro , for some 15 years.

"It was the first such transplant in the world between twins with Turner syndrome,", Belgian gynaecologist Jacques Donnez, who carried out the operation in August 2009, told AFP.

It was also the first ovarian transplant to be done in Europe, said Donnez, who has since successfully performed a similar operation involving sisters who are not .

Thiriot lacked ovaries because of Turner Syndrome, which affects one girl born in 2,500, but her twin sister, though having a similar chromosome deficiency, was fertile and had two children before the transplant.

A few months after the transplant Thiriot's regular had established itself and she became pregnant quite normally.

"Victoria is totally normal and doen't have Turner syndrome," she said.