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The newspaper of The Johns Hopkins University June 25, 2007 | Vol. 36 No. 38
 
Donated Embryos Could Result In Over 2,000 New Stem Cell Lines

Fertility clinic patients say they're likely to contribute extra embryos for research

By Ed Bodensiek
Berman Institute of Bioethics

In a survey of more than 1,000 infertility patients with frozen embryos, 60 percent of patients report that they are likely to donate their embryos to stem cell research, a level of donation that could result in roughly 2,000 to 3,000 new embryonic stem cell lines. Researchers from the Johns Hopkins and Duke universities report the startling findings in the July 6 issue of Science.

In August 2001, less than two dozen embryonic stem cell lines were made eligible for federal research funding. Most scientists now agree that the eligible lines have proven inadequate in number and unsafe for translational research.

Until recently, the best estimate of human embryos currently in storage that might be available for additional stem cell research was 3 percent; the 2003 study showed that donations would yield, at best, less than 300 new lines.

"Until now, the debate about federal funding for embryonic stem cell research has been dominated by lawmakers and advocates. But what about the preferences of infertility patients, who are ethically responsible for, and have legal authority over, these embryos?" asked Ruth Faden, director of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics and one of the study's two co-authors. "These patients face the often morally difficult task of deciding what to do with their remaining cryopreserved embryos. In the end, it is these people who determine whether embryos are available for adoption or for medical research."

The 1,020 couples responding to the survey currently control the disposition of between 3,900 and 5,900 embryos. Nearly half the respondents (49 percent) indicated they were somewhat or very likely to donate their frozen embryos to medical research. When asked about stem cell research in particular, this percentage increased to 60 percent.

"Our data suggest that the way many infertility patients resolve the very personal moral challenge of what to do with their embryos is consonant with the conclusions of the majority of Americans who support embryonic stem cell research," said Anne Lyerly, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Duke and co-author of the study. "Many infertility patients see donating their remaining embryos for medical research as preferable to simply discarding them or even to donating to another infertile couple for adoption."

Infertility patients in the Lyerly and Faden study said they were more likely to donate their embryos to scientists for stem cell research (60 percent of respondents) than to other couples for adoption (22 percent). Embryos are currently frozen in fertility clinics because more were created than could safely be returned to a woman's uterus at the time of fertilization, or in order to increase the chances of pregnancy from a single cycle of in vitro fertilization.

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