A Girl or a Boy, You Pick
The Los Angeles Times; Los Angeles, Calif.; Jul 23, 2002; AARON ZITNER;
July 23 2002
| Embryo sorting makes it possible to screen for gender and diseases. But the embryos no one wants raise profound ethical questions. |
She had the name picked out since high school: Logann Rae, taken from a
soap opera. She had two dolls waiting in a closet, both saved since
childhood. Tanya had always dreamed of having a daughter, and of the
intimate bond that would grow as they picked out dresses together,
styled their hair and painted their fingernails. But Tanya's first child
was a son. Then came another. When an ultrasound showed that her third
child was also a boy, she struggled to hide her tears from the nurse.
And that is why this year she drove 400 miles to a doctor's office in
Westwood. Using methods common in fertility clinics, doctors mixed
Tanya's eggs with her husband's sperm to create five embryos in a
laboratory dish. Then, using a new technique, they examined the embryos
to determine which had the DNA to become boys, and which were programmed to be girls.
The three male embryos were frozen, their fate to be decided later. The
two female embryos were transferred to Tanya's womb in an attempt to
create the daughter she always wanted.
The embryo-sorting technique-called PGD, for pre-implantation genetic
diagnosis-is quickly becoming the most controversial development in
high-tech reproduction. Doctors are able to screen embryos not only for
gender, but for whether they carry the genes involved in cystic
fibrosis, sickle cell anemia and more than 100 other inherited diseases.
They can even tell whether an embryo would grow into a good cell donor
to help a sick person. The information is helping parents choose which
embryos they want-and which to reject as unhealthy, or merely
undesirable. The cost is about $10,000, including the price of in vitro
fertilization, the procedure that creates "test-tube babies" and which
is a required part of embryo screening.
But as the number of doctors offering the service leaps upward, embryo
screening is raising some profound questions: Is it proper to discard an
embryo based on its genes or gender? Which lives are not worth living?
Who decides?
"It's scary to have this power," said Tracy Otte of Fountain Valley, who
is trying to have a child and avoid the muscular dystrophy that killed
two brothers in their early 20s. "If this technology was there, would my
brothers ever have been born? It becomes: Did their lives have value?
Absolutely, they had value. But it was also tragic to see how young they
died."
Some fertility specialists say the questions will only become thornier,
as scientists are bound to create tests not only for disease but for
various traits. "There will come a day when we can determine height or
weight or skin tone characteristics, and the question is: "What do we do
with that information?" said Dr. Jeffrey Steinberg of the Fertility
Institutes in Tarzana, which has offered embryo screening for about a
year. Society at large "has to give us feedback, because this is as new
to us as it is to the rest of the world."
"We've arrived at the point where we need a national debate-no doubt
about that," said David Hill, scientific director at ART Reproductive
Center of Beverly Hills, which offers embryo screening services.
It is far from clear if parents will ever be able to test for
intelligence or athletic ability, which are presumed to involve many
genes and environmental factors. Still, embryo screening is one of
several developments that could give parents significant control of
their children's genetic makeup.
Armed with data from the Human Genome Project, researchers are probing
the genetic foundations of obesity, mood and disease. Testing devices
called "gene chips" are allowing scientists to track the activity not of
one gene, but of thousands at the same time. Cloning and genetic
engineering have enabled biologists to augment the genetic makeup of
animals, adding genes so that the animals grow faster, bigger or more
resistant to disease.
But even before scientists gain additional powers over human
reproduction, there is worldwide debate over how to handle the
information embryo screening can reveal.
Debate Began in Late '80s
The debate has been building since the late 1980s, when doctors at
London's Hammersmith Hospital learned how to tease a cell from a
3-day-old embryo and study its chromosomes for gender. By weeding out
male embryos from the females, the doctors aimed to help parents avoid
such gender-linked diseases as hemophilia and Duchenne muscular
dystrophy, which are inherited overwhelmingly by boys.
Later techniques allowed doctors to screen for the genes that cause a
variety of diseases. The screening, however, has become widely available
only in the last two years, as more companies have begun handling the
sophisticated laboratory work for fertility doctors.
While no one keeps complete numbers, specialists say about 50 U.S.
clinics now offer the service to patients. Nearly 2,000
embryo-screened babies have been born worldwide since 1992.
Embryo screening has caught the attention of Joy Pablo, 34, a Los
Angeles nurse who has battled breast cancer since 1998. She worries that
her 5-year-old daughter will one day face the disease. She hopes her
next child can escape the same fear.
"If they could guarantee me a boy, I would have peace of mind," said
Pablo, "because the chances of breast cancer are so much smaller than
with a girl."
For Otte, 37, whose brothers died from muscular dystrophy, the idea of
rejecting a potential child because of the disease is unsettling.
Her brothers had friends and went to college-one went to his high school
prom. "They had this disease, but they weren't this disease," she said.
Nonetheless, she is trying to have a daughter through embryo screening
because muscular dystrophy rarely strikes girls.
"I know the road map of this disease, and it's too tough to repeat
that," said Otte, a third-grade teacher. "At age 8 or 9 you start
thinking about a wheelchair. A cold can kill because there's no strength
to cough up mucus."
When having children, people such as Pablo and Otte often roll the
genetic dice and hope for the best. Or they become pregnant and use a
prenatal test, such as amniocentesis, followed by an abortion if the
test turns up a problem.
With embryo sorting, "they can start their pregnancy on Day One with a
commitment to continuing it," said Dr. Mark Hughes of Wayne State
university in Detroit, who helped develop embryo diagnosis with the
Hammersmith doctors. "How can it be more ethically troublesome to test
before a pregnancy than later, when the fetus has a heartbeat and is
moving?"
Many Ethical Concerns
And yet, something about embryo screening makes many people nervous,
even people who do not see the embryo as equivalent to a child.
Where amniocentesis usually provides information about a single fetus,
embryo screening allows parents to judge and reject many potential
children at once. And because it bypasses the pain of abortion, some
fear it will be used too freely, coarsening attitudes toward the embryo.
In Germany, the federal government has barred embryo screening for any
purpose. In England, it can be used to select a child's gender only when
there is a medical need.
But in the United States, fertility techniques are regulated more
lightly, and there are no restrictions on how embryo screening may be
used. That leaves policy to be set by people such as Dr. Jaroslav Marik
of the Tyler Medical Clinic, the doctor Tanya visited in her attempt to
conceive a daughter.
A regal man of 69, Marik has worked at the Tyler clinic, in the shadow
of the UCLA campus, since 1971. He was one of the first doctors in a
Western state to offer in vitro fertilization. An enthusiastic defender
of patient choice, Marik believes embryo screening has the potential to
nearly eliminate diseases such as cystic fibrosis.
But he also does not shy from offering it to patients who have no
medical need to select a child's gender. "What is medical need?" he
asked. "Isn't the right to happiness and health a part of that?"
"Is there a medical reason for Dolly Parton to have boobs like that?" he
asked. "Is there a medical reason to have liposuction? Is that a misuse
of medical technology?"
Marik, who works with embryologist Jerry L. Hall, said about 70 of his
patients have screened embryos since 2001, including 15 who sought a boy
or girl for non-medical purposes.
He believes he does the screening with proper respect for the embryo.
Patients work hard to make embryos and want some good to come from them,
he said. They usually ask that rejected embryos be donated to research
or, when they are healthy, to infertile couples.
"I hardly remember anyone who instructed us to destroy the embryo," he
said.
Flaws, Embryo Rejection
But much of Marik's reasoning raises concerns among critics of embryo
screening-a constellation that includes antiabortion groups, feminists,
advocates for the disabled and people within the fertility profession.
Rejecting a boy or girl when there is no medical need draws the most
objections.
"Morally reprehensible," said Dr. Robert E. Anderson of the Southern
California Center for Reproductive Medicine in Newport Beach. "Most
Americans, no matter where they come down on the question of where life
begins, would find something morally objectionable about creating
embryos and then discarding some simply because of their sex."
"It is inherently sexist. It values one sex in favor of another," said
Tania Simoncelli of the Center for Genetics and Society, an Oakland
public policy group.
Hughes, the Wayne State doctor, said: "I went into this to help people
with disease. Last time I checked, your gender is not a disease."
Some also argue that allowing gender selection endorses lopsided gender
preferences in other countries. In some parts of India, where boys are
heavily favored for economic and other reasons, there are only 86 women
for every 100 men. Parents commonly use sonograms and abortion to avoid
having girls, though the practice is illegal.
Still, some Indian fertility doctors bridle at the notion of being bound
by Western views. "I do not understand why some Indians are ashamed that
most Indians want to have boys," said Dr. Aniruddha Malpani, who has
produced 22 children-all boys-from screened embryos at his Bombay
clinic. "The preference for sons is based on traditions which are
centuries old,
and these preferences are not going to change quickly."
Using embryo screening to detect disease has also drawn protest.
Embryo tests can detect the genes behind cystic fibrosis, for example,
but not whether the illness will be so mild that symptoms are
negligible, as sometimes happens. Some critics say it is immoral to
reject a potential life on the basis of a disease that may turn out to
be mild.
Some people argue against rejecting even embryos destined to have severe
disease. "Most people with disabilities rate their quality of life as
much higher than other people think," said Deborah Kaplan, executive
director of the World Institute on Disability in Oakland. "People make
the decision [to reject embryos] based on a prejudice that having a
disability means having a low quality of life."
There is a subjective component to deciding whether any disease or flaw
is severe enough to make life not worth living. When Dorothy Wertz of
the University of Massachusetts Medical School surveyed U.S. genetics
professionals in 1995, she found that about 30% would abort a pregnancy
if the child was destined to have severe obesity-something she considers
to be more a cosmetic condition than a disease.
The biggest use of embryo screening could have nothing to do with
disease in the traditional sense. Instead, screening may become a
routine way to boost the success of in vitro fertilization.
Embryos that look fine under the microscope often self-destruct in the
womb because of extra or missing chromosomes. Some doctors are now
screening for these faulty chromosomes before choosing which embryos to
transfer to patients.
"The embryologists who begin to work with this, their jaws just drop as
they look back and say, 'Hey, how many of these embryos that looked
perfect but were doomed to failure have I loaded into a catheter and
transferred to a woman?' " said Dr. Beth Ary of the Reproductive
Specialty Center in Newport Beach.
But this use of embryo screening is controversial as well. Some doctors
note that clinics test no more than eight of the 23 pairs of
chromosomes, and problems could be hiding in the others. They also worry
that embryos are damaged in the process of pulling off a cell.
But Ary and her embryologist husband, Jim, said the birth rates at their
clinic rose after they began offering embryo screening to patients in
March 2001. And a Spanish study found screening raised pregnancy rates
among women who had repeatedly lost pregnancies for unexplained reasons.
Hoping for a Little Girl
For Tanya, the visit to Marik's office was a final effort for a
daughter. After three boys, her husband was willing to have only one
more child.
"They say the odds are 50-50 of having a girl," she said earlier this
year. "But it isn't for me, anyway."
She was dressed in a bathrobe, lying on a gurney in a Tyler clinic
examination room. Two female embryos had just been placed inside her.
She had asked Marik to give researchers the three male embryos she
created, or to donate them to an infertile couple, at his discretion.
Tanya said she is comfortable using the technology but fears some
relatives, who are devout Roman Catholics, would object if they knew.
She asked that her last name and hometown not be printed.
She talked about her love for her sons, but also about a longing to
re-create the intimacy that she enjoys with her own mother. "It just
seems that when boys get older they close up a little more and get
married, and the wife takes on that closeness," she said.
While her husband bonds with their boys through fishing and golf, Tanya
dreams of barrettes and nail polish. "I do my boys' hair up," she said."I put in lots of gel and spike it up real fancy. I painted their toes,
but my
husband said, 'I don't think we're going to start that.'
"He said: 'You need a girl.'"
Two weeks after her visit came the news she had wanted for so long: She
was pregnant. "There was so much desire, and now it's being fulfilled,"
she said.
Her daughter is due in September. |