Friday, July 06, 2007

Genetic screening may endanger fetuses
Screening unborn children for genetic defects appears to reduce the chances of a healthy pregnancy and live birth, new research suggests.
The findings, published in the current issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, suggest that checking embryos before using them in in vitro fertilization, and implanting the ones that seem more genetically and structurally healthy, may actually lead to lower rates of pregnancy.
Related Stories

Fertility Negatively Affected by Embryo Screening

Regular IVF often best when only one egg available

A Kindler, Gentler IVF Treatment

'Barker Beauty' Shares Struggle to Conceive
Top Health stories

The Hottest Health Tips Under the Sun

Growing Up in a Hospital Bed

Burger King to Banish Trans Fat
adsonar_placementId=1280601;adsonar_pid=42750;adsonar_ps=-1;adsonar_zw=165;adsonar_zh=220;adsonar_jv='ads.adsonar.com';
Ironically, this technique -- known as preimplantation genetic screening, or PGS -- is aimed at finding the healthiest embryos. Most experts thought it would not change the odds for women trying to get pregnant, and the technique has even become routine for women over 35 who wish to get pregnant.
"In contrast to what would be expected or what many people are saying who are currently offering this technique, PGS actually decreases pregnancy chances in these groups of women who are 35 years or older," said Sjoerd Repping, director of the IVF lab at the Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam and one of the main authors of the study.
Many doctors expressed surprise at the findings.
"This is the first study that suggests that not only does it not improve the outcome, but it may actually be harmful," said Dr. Steven Ory, president of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine.
"I'm a little bit surprised to see a decreased rate," said Dr. Marcelle Cedars, director of the division of reproductive endocrinology and infertility at the University of California at San Francisco. "But I'm not really surprised to see an absence of a positive effect."
Reducing Reproductive Chances
PGS is often done as a part of in vitro fertilization.
In IVF, a sperm and an egg are joined together outside a woman's body. As the newly formed embryo grows, it splits into more and more cells.
PGS involves taking a single cell from the growing embryo and, in this study, looking to see if it has the proper complement of two of each chromosome --

Read more http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=3344846&page=1

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home