Made-to-order babies prompt ethics debate
CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) -- In
a growing practice that troubles some ethicists, a Chicago laboratory helped
create five healthy babies so that they could serve as stem-cell donors for
their ailing brothers and sisters.
The made-to-order infants, from different
families, were screened and selected when they were still embryos to make sure
they would be compatible donors. Their siblings suffered from leukemia or a rare
and potentially lethal anemia.
This is the first time embryo tissue-typing has
been done for common disorders like leukemia that are not inherited, and the
results suggest that many more children than previously thought could benefit
from the technology, said Dr. Anver Kuliev, a Chicago doctor who participated in
the research.
"This technology has wide implications in medical
practice," Kuliev said Tuesday at a news conference.
The Chicago doctors said the healthy embryos that
were not matches were frozen for potential future use. But some ethicists said
such perfectly healthy embryos could end up being discarded.
"This was a search-and-destroy mission," said
Richard Doerflinger of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The chosen
embryos "were allowed to be born so they could donate tissue to benefit someone
else."
Unregulated industry
Valparaiso University professor Gilbert
Meilaender, a member of the President's Council on Bioethics, called the
practice "morally troubling."
The council recently called for increased scrutiny
of the largely unregulated U.S. infertility industry.
The cases involved prenatal tests called
pre-implantation HLA testing, pioneered at Chicago's Reproductive Genetics
Institute.
The tests are an offshoot of pre-implantation
genetic diagnosis, which has been done for more than 1,000 couples worldwide to
weed out test-tube embryos with genetic diseases such as Down syndrome, or, more
recently, for sex selection.
The institute's doctors made headlines four years
ago after performing embryo tissue typing plus genetic disease screening for a
Colorado couple who wanted to create another baby to save their daughter, who
had a rare inherited disease called Fanconi anemia. The resulting baby boy, Adam
Nash, donated bone marrow in an operation doctors said was a success.
Since then, embryo tissue typing with genetic
disease testing has been performed more than three dozen times worldwide, with
most of the cases done at the Chicago institute, Kuliev said.
Kuliev said the latest cases are the first
instances in which embryos were tissue-typed but not screened genetically for
diseases.
Selective conception
The cases, reported in Wednesday's Journal of the
American Medical Association, involved nine couples who submitted embryos that
underwent tissue-typing tests during 2002 and 2003. Five had infants considered
suitable donors.
So far, stem cells from the umbilical cord blood
of one infant have been donated to an ailing sibling, Kuliev said. He called the
operation a success but said the older child will need continued monitoring to
be sure.
Another baby was born last June to an English
couple who traveled to Chicago after British fertility authorities denied them
permission to undergo the procedure in England, said Dr. Mohammed Taranissi, a
London doctor who co-authored the JAMA report. The couple's older child has
Diamond-Blackfan anemia, a rare blood ailment that can lead to leukemia.
Taranissi said a transplant from the baby boy's umbilical cord blood is
scheduled soon.
Kuliev said the institute has done HLA embryo
testing alone for more than a dozen other couples and demand is growing.
More than 13,000 U.S. residents are diagnosed
yearly with one of the leukemias involved in the research -- acute myeloid
leukemia and acute lymphoid leukemia, the most common childhood leukemia.
Taranissi disagreed with ethicists concerned about
discarding disease-free embryos. He noted that it often happens with in vitro
fertilization, when doctors frequently create more test-tube embryos than are
needed.
With tissue-typing embryos, "you're doing this as
a lifesaving procedure most of the time," Taranissi said.
For years, families with sick children have
conceived babies without costly test-tube procedures, taking a 1-in-4 chance
that the child will be a match for the ailing sibling, said University of
Wisconsin medical ethicist Norman Fost, who wrote a JAMA editorial.
Some have had abortions when standard prenatal
testing showed the child would not be a suitable donor, he said.
The new procedure, he noted, does not involve
abortion and poses no known risks to the embryos. Furthermore, parents seeking
donor babies typically are well-intentioned and love the donor children, Fost
said.
"Of all the reasons people have babies, this would
seem to be a wonderful reason. Most reasons are either mindless sex or selfish
reasons," he said.
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2004 The
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