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E-Letter responses to:

reports:
Woo Suk Hwang, Sung Il Roh, Byeong Chun Lee, Sung Keun Kang, Dae Kee Kwon, Sue Kim, Sun Jong Kim, Sun Woo Park, Hee Sun Kwon, Chang Kyu Lee, Jung Bok Lee, Jin Mee Kim, Curie Ahn, Sun Ha Paek, Sang Sik Chang, Jung Jin Koo, Hyun Soo Yoon, Jung Hye Hwang, Youn Young Hwang, Ye Soo Park, Sun Kyung Oh, Hee Sun Kim, Jong Hyuk Park, Shin Yong Moon, and Gerald Schatten
Patient-Specific Embryonic Stem Cells Derived from Human SCNT Blastocysts
Science 2005; 0: 1112286v1 [Abstract] [PDF]
*E-Letters: Submit a response to this article

Published E-Letter responses:

[Read E-Letter] Egg-sharing to alleviate the shortage of donor oocytes for therapeutic cloning
Boon C. Heng, Tong Cao, Guo Q. Tong, Soon C. Ng, Boon C. Heng   (24 May 2005)

Egg-sharing to alleviate the shortage of donor oocytes for therapeutic cloning 24 May 2005
  Top
Boon C. Heng,
Research Fellow
National University of Singapore,
Tong Cao, Guo Q. Tong, Soon C. Ng, Boon C. Heng

Respond to this E-Letter:
Re: Egg-sharing to alleviate the shortage of donor oocytes for therapeutic cloning

We read with great interest, the recent advances in therapeutic cloning made by Hwang and colleagues (1), in which the efficiency of therapeutic cloning for the derivation of embryonic stem cells was dramatically improved. Previously, only 1 in 200 attempts were successful; now the success rate stands at around 1 in a dozen. Further rapid progress in this technology is likely, and there is a high probability of therapeutic cloning becoming a routine medical treatment procedure in the future. Nevertheless, a major bottleneck of this technology is the severe shortage of human donor oocytes.

A possible solution that appears particularly promising is egg- sharing in return for subsidized fertility treatment (2). The cost of in vitro fertilization treatment is particularly high, which is often a huge financial burden for any childless couple contemplating fertility treatment (3), even for those in the middle-income group. To partially offset the high costs, a fraction of the patient’s eggs may be donated in return for subsidized treatment. Indeed, such egg-sharing schemes to aid women who are unable to produce any oocytes of their own have been going on for some time (2).

It can be argued that egg-sharing is ethically justifiable, because it reaps benefits for both parties involved. The financial burden for one childless couple is greatly eased, while a new hope is given to another childless woman who is unable to produce any oocytes of her own. Compared to the rampant commercialization that is inherent in the direct sale and purchase of donor oocytes, egg-sharing appears to be more morally palatable.

Likewise, it would also be more ethically justifiable for egg-sharing to be utilized in providing donor oocytes for therapeutic cloning. On one hand, a childless couple is being aided financially; while on the other hand, a new lease of life may be given to a terminally sick patient. No doubt it may be argued that by giving a fraction of her eggs away, the fertility treatment of the donor may be compromised to some extent. However, it is very often the case that the use of powerful drugs in fertility treatment leads to an overproduction of oocytes and hence supernumerary embryos, which are frozen, stored for several years, and then eventually destroyed (4). Indeed, recent evidence would suggest that egg- sharing does not significantly compromise the success of fertility treatment (5). Perhaps it would make more moral sense to utilize excess oocytes in therapeutic cloning.

1. W. S. Hwang, S. I. Roh, B. C. Lee, S. K. Kang, D. K. Kwon, S. Kim et al., Patient- specific embryonic stem cells derived from human SCNT blastocysts, Science, published online 19 May 2005.

2. E. Blyth, Subsidized IVF: the development of 'egg sharing' in the United Kingdom, Hum. Reprod. 17 (no. 12), 3254-9 (2002).

3. L. Garceau, J. Henderson, L. J. Davis, S. Petrou, L R. Henderson, E. McVeigh, D. H. Barlow, L. L. Davidson, Economic implications of assisted reproductive techniques: a systematic review, Hum, Reprod. 17 (no. 12), 3090-109 (2002).

4. H. Forster, The legal and ethical debate surrounding the storage and destruction of frozen human embryos: a reaction to the mass disposal in Britain and the lack of law in the United States, Wash, Univ, Law Q. 76 (no. 2), 759-80 (1998).

5. M. Y. Thum, A. Gafar, M. Wren, R. Faris, B. Ogunyemi, L. Korea, L. Scott, H. I. Abdalla, Does egg-sharing compromise the chance of donors or recipients achieving a live birth?, Hum. Reprod. 18 (no. 11), 2363-7 (2003).


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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)