By Duke Medicine News and Communications
Fertility patients who are done having children feel
responsible for the stored, frozen embryos left over from their
treatment, yet more than half are against implanting the
embryos in anyone else, according to a new study by researchers
at Duke University Medical Center.
"This really turns our moral presumptions on their heads,"
says Anne Drapkin
Lyerly, MD, an obstetrician/gynecologist and bioethicist at
Duke, and lead investigator of the findings that appear online
in Fertility & Sterility.
"Parents care very much about what happens to their embryos,
but that doesn't mean they want them to become children. Our
study shows that many feel they have to do what they can to
prevent their embryo from becoming a child."
The survey of more than 1,000 fertility patients is the
largest and only multi-site study to shed important light on
the state of the nation's 500,000 frozen embryos currently in
storage. It reveals previously unexplored concerns that
patients have about their embryos, and it comes at a time when
several states and even the federal government are attempting
to enact legislation that would either assert an embryo is a
person, allow abandoned embryos to be adopted by another
couple, or allow unused embryos to become "wards of the
state."
What to do with those unused embryos has also become a
sticking point for providers, since they are held responsible
for safe storage or disposition of apparently abandoned
embryos.
Fresh embryos are used in more than 80% of fertility
treatment cycles, but most patients also choose to freeze some
embryos that were created but not implanted, to use as a
possible backup. This means that extra embryos often remain
after treatment is completed. Previous studies have found that
when childbearing is complete, as many as 70 percent of
patients put off for five years -- or more -- the decision of
what to do with those frozen embryos, even while they continue
to pay annual storage fees. In Lyerly's study, 20 percent of
the patients who had completed childbearing indicated they were
likely to freeze their embryos "forever."
The lack of acceptable options fuels patients' reluctance to
make a decision. "Either the options they prefer aren't
available or they are unacceptable," explains Lyerly.
In the survey, the researchers presented four embryo
disposition options: thawing and discarding; reproductive
donation; indefinite freezing; and donation for research. The
majority were unlikely to choose any of these options except
for one: research donation.
In a previous paper published in Science, Lyerly reported
that 60 percent would be likely to donate unused embryos for
stem cell research, an option not readily available. But even
if federal policies on funding stem cell research change,
Lyerly says that doesn't solve patients' conundrum.
"For many of these patients, the need to make a decision
about disposing these embryos is not discussed up front.
Understandably, fertility patients have hard times thinking
about destroying their embryos when they are emotionally and
financially invested in trying to make a baby," she says.
The conundrum arises when reproductive goals change without
a renewed discussion about what to do with the embryos that
have been stored. "Many centers don't make available all the
options for disposition," Lyerly says. "Even in places where
embryo research is not conducted, it's possible that embryos
can be transferred to another center, yet this might not be
discussed."
Two methods that were considered somewhat acceptable by
about 20 percent of the fertility patients were placement of
embryos in a woman's body at an infertile time, and the idea of
a ritual disposal ceremony. Yet, Lyerly says these alternatives
are rarely offered to patients even though "these may be the
answers to many patients' desires as they allow the embryos to
pass in a way that seems most respectful to them."
By bringing fertility patients' concerns to the forefront,
Lyerly hopes the next step will be the development of clinical
guidelines and ongoing informed consent processes for patients
at various stages of fertility treatment. She also hopes it
will encourage more detailed disclosure about the available
disposition options and facilitate broad availability of
disposition decisions that are morally acceptable to the
majority of fertility patients.
This research was supported by the Greenwall Foundation
Presidential Award and Faculty Scholars Program; Duke Institute
for Genome Sciences and Policy's Center for Genome Ethics, Law
and Policy Research Fellowship Award; National Heart Lung and
Blood Institute, the Career Development Award from VA Health
Services Research and Development the U.S. Department of
Energy.