Titel: In Vitro Derived Human Gametes as a Reproductive Technology: Scientific, Ethical, and Regulatory Implications
Termin:
19.4.2023
Veranstaltungsort:
500 5th St NW
Washington DC 20001
USA
Weitere Informationen:
https://www.nationalacademies.org/event/04-19-2023/in-vitro-derived-hu ...
Laboratory studies reconstituting gamete development can advance understanding of how this process proceeds in early human development and what genes are responsible at different stages of the pathway. Were in vitro human gametes ever approved for clinical use, however, they could provide a novel option for prospective parents and significantly alter the practice of reproductive medicine. Somatic cells taken from parents theoretically could be converted to iPSCs, further differentiated into functional gametes, and these gametes used to create a human embryo through in vitro fertilization. This ability could enable couples who are not otherwise able to do so (for example because of conditions such as infertility or same-sex couples) to produce embryos that are genetically related to both parents.
The ability to generate large numbers of embryos also could enable many parents who carry known disease-causing mutations to undertake highly efficient preimplantation genetic screening and establish a pregnancy only with an embryo that does not carry that mutation. The ability to genome edit in gamete precursor cells provides yet another possibility that could enable prospective parents to produce embryos without a disease-causing genome, representing a potential alternative pathway for undertaking heritable genome editing.
Any use of in vitro-derived human gametes would raise important scientific, ethical, social, and regulatory issues. These are not questions that can be answered by scientific, bioethics, and regulatory communities alone– they will require broader societal engagement. In anticipation of continued research developments, however, now is the time to review the state of the science, understand what is driving progress in this area, what is likely to be achievable and what is likely not to be realistic, and recognize the urgent issues that in vitro-derived gametes could raise. A careful assessment now would provide foundational analysis to inform the development of future consultative social, legislative, or regulatory discussions.
Kontakt:
Ashley Bologna
ABologna@nas.edu
Schlagworte: Fortpflanzungsmedizin, In-vitro-Fertilisation, Medizinische Ethik