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- <text id=91TT2197>
- <title>
- Sep. 30, 1991: Curing Infertility:Making Babies
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 30, 1991 Curing Infertility
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 56
- COVER STORIES
- Making Babies
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>More than a million couples seek treatment for infertility each
- year. Now some remarkable insights into the mating dance of sperm
- and egg are bringing answers to their prayers.
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-Dewitt--Reported by Ann Blackman/Washington,
- Barbara Dolan/Norfolk and Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Couched in a halo of nutrient cells, an egg smaller than
- the dot on an i drifts slowly down a Fallopian tube, one of a
- pair of narrow passages that lead from a woman's ovaries to her
- womb. Like a beacon guiding ships at night, the egg sends forth
- a calling signal. A convoy of sperm--the remnants of an
- armada that was once a couple of hundred million strong--sails
- into view, their long tails thrashing vigorously. Lured by the
- chemical signal, several hundred of the most energetic swimmers
- close in on the egg, their narrow tips unleashing a carefully
- timed sequence of biochemical salvos. One substance dissolves
- the jelly-like veil surrounding the egg. Another softens the
- egg's tough outer shell, preparing it for penetration. In the
- last moments before conception, a few dozen sperm race to break
- through the final barricade.
- </p>
- <p> One and only one succeeds. The instant it tunnels its way
- past the egg's outer layer, an electric charge fires across the
- membrane and a signal from the sperm causes the eggshell to snap
- shut, blocking entry to any remaining contenders. The successful
- seed then releases its tightly coiled package of DNA, which
- fuses with the egg's own DNA and sets in motion a series of
- genetic events that culminate, nine months later, in the birth
- of a new human being.
- </p>
- <p> That is how it is supposed to work. And for hundreds of
- thousands of years, without anyone knowing quite how or why, it
- has worked--well enough to perpetuate the species, populate
- the planet and bring the joy and responsibility of children to
- countless generations of parents.
- </p>
- <p> But what if it doesn't work? What if egg meets sperm and
- nothing happens? Human sexual reproduction, as couples even
- before Sarah and Abraham have known, can be a heartbreakingly
- unreliable process. Even under the best of circumstances--a
- fertile couple having intercourse at the optimum moment in the
- woman's cycle--it fails 3 times out of 4. When conditions are
- less than ideal--when the woman is over 35, for example, or
- the man's sperm is defective or in short supply--the odds
- lengthen dramatically.
- </p>
- <p> America today is in the midst of an infertility epidemic,
- the unforeseen consequence of a variety of historical and
- socioeconomic trends. The advent of the Pill, the women's
- movement and an economy that pushes women into the workplace
- during their most fertile years have led many members of the
- baby-boom generation to wait so long to have children that they
- are in danger of waiting forever. This same generation was also
- party to the sexual revolution, and that too has taken a toll.
- With exposure to more sex partners came a sharp rise in sexually
- transmitted diseases and other infections that can impair
- fertility. In addition, tens of thousands of women now in their
- 30s and 40s were born with malformed reproductive systems as a
- result of their mothers' use of the drug DES
- (diethylstilbestrol), which was widely prescribed in the 1940s
- and '50s to prevent miscarriage.
- </p>
- <p> Taken together, more than 1 in 12 U.S. couples has
- difficulty conceiving--a number that is as high as 1 in 7 for
- couples in the thirtysomething years. And given the size of that
- age group, there have never been as many people looking for
- help. The number of doctor visits for fertility problems nearly
- tripled between 1968 and 1984. Last year more than a million new
- patients sought treatment, six times as many people as were
- treated for lung cancer and 10 times the number of reported
- cases of AIDS.
- </p>
- <p> The sad fact is that half the people who seek assistance
- never overcome their infertility. But there is real hope for
- even the most difficult cases. Through a series of remarkable
- advances, scientists have opened a new window on the mysteries
- of fertilization that shows for the first time not only how the
- process works but also what can be done when it doesn't. Doctors
- today can manipulate virtually every aspect of the reproductive
- cycle, from artificially ripening eggs in the ovary to inserting
- individual sperm directly into the egg's inner membrane. Now
- researchers at several U.S. clinics are pushing the scientific
- envelope even further, screening embryos for genetic defects in
- the lab before placing them in their mothers' wombs.
- </p>
- <p> The result is a reproductive revolution: an explosion of
- new techniques for overcoming infertility and an unprecedented
- rush by would-be parents to take advantage of them. Thirteen
- years after the birth of the first test-tube baby, Louise Brown,
- in England, in vitro fertilization (IVF) has not only reset the
- biological clock for thousands of patients--and produced some
- 10,000 babies in the U.S. alone--but spawned a host of new
- procedures, like GIFT, ZIFT, microinjection and zona drilling,
- that offer even greater promise. Today, using the new
- technology, an infertile couple in their mid-30s has as good a
- chance of getting pregnant artificially as a pair of fertile
- teenagers having unprotected sex at any random moment the
- old-fashioned way.
- </p>
- <p> Families can be pieced together with borrowed sperm,
- borrowed eggs and borrowed wombs. Women are having babies long
- after their prime childbearing year--even after menopause. In
- yet another twist, Arlette Schweitzer, 42, of Aberdeen, S.
- Dak., is expected to give birth to her own twin grandchildren
- next month, having served as a surrogate for her daughter
- Christa, who was born without a uterus. "Next to Christa, I'm
- the happiest woman in the world," says Schweitzer. "We feel so
- blessed."
- </p>
- <p> The brave new technologies stir up conflicting feelings,
- breeding hope and despair where once there was resignation. The
- high price of in vitro treatments (ranging from $6,000 to more
- than $50,000 per live birth) means that only the rich and
- well-insured can afford them. Patients who have undergone round
- after round say it is like riding an emotional roller coaster;
- you never know when you are going to run into a brick wall and
- have your heart broken.
- </p>
- <p> The new techniques have also given birth to once
- unimaginable ethical dilemmas. Do sperm and egg donors have a
- claim on their biological offspring, and vice versa? Do embryos,
- frozen or thawed, have a constitutional right to life? How much
- manipulation of genetic material will society be willing to
- permit? "Technology makes us look at our most cherished
- conceptions of who we are and what we want to be," says Dr.
- Kenneth Ryan, a professor of reproductive biology at Harvard
- Medical School. "People have to decide what kind of society they
- want to live in."
- </p>
- <p> But all these issues pale before the newly revealed
- miracle of fertilization, an event so dizzyingly complex that
- researchers say the more they know, the more they wonder that
- it works as often as it does. The actual merger of egg and sperm
- turns out to be one of the most straightforward steps in the
- process--and the easiest to duplicate in a test tube. The
- events that occur before and after that union, scientists say,
- are where the real troubles lie.
- </p>
- <p> The long road to conception actually begins seven months
- before a woman is born, when microscopic eggs start to form in
- the buds that will become her ovaries. Unlike the testicles of
- a man, which continuously churn out sperm at the prodigious
- rate of 1,000 per sec. (30 billion a year), the ovaries never
- produce any new eggs. The eggs a woman is born with--usually
- about 2 million--are all she will ever have. By puberty,
- normal degeneration will have reduced that number to about
- 400,000. When the woman exhausts the supply, her ovaries will
- virtually shut down, an event she experiences as menopause.
- </p>
- <p> The limited supply of eggs is believed to be a chief
- reason that fertility decreases with age. Each month, starting
- at puberty, hundreds of eggs begin the maturation process. One
- of them, growing in a fluid-filled sac called the follicle,
- quickly establishes itself as the first among equals. In a
- normal cycle, only that single egg will be released to the
- Fallopian tubes for possible fertilization. About 1,000 more
- will wither away and disappear. So although a woman may have
- 400,000 eggs to start with, the number she can effectively use
- is closer to 400.
- </p>
- <p> To make matters worse for the aging female, the eggs that
- remain in her ovaries get older and less fertile with each
- passing year. Recent studies of egg donation provide strong
- evidence that it is the age of the eggs, and not the age of the
- reproductive system, that causes fertility to decline sharply
- after age 40: older women who receive eggs from younger women
- get pregnant at rates comparable to the age of the egg donor,
- not the age of the recipient.
- </p>
- <p> None of this is to say that men do not play a role in
- infertility. On the contrary, the sperm of the human male is
- notoriously prone to defects. A typical sample is riddled with
- "pinheaded" sperm, which lack a full complement of DNA,
- two-headed freaks, and sperm that cannot swim a straight line.
- Urologists estimate that when a couple experiences infertility,
- so-called male factors are just as likely to be responsible as
- female ones. But because of the way sperm are manufactured,
- assembly-line fashion in the factory of the testes, not much can
- be done to change either their quality or rate of production
- (although scientists have developed some extraordinary new
- procedures to help deficient sperm accomplish their mission).
- Even the varicocelectomy, a widely prescribed operation that
- enhances sperm production by removing a varicose vein in the
- scrotum, seems from recent studies to have little effect on a
- couple's ability to conceive.
- </p>
- <p> The sequence of events by which eggs mature and ovulate,
- by contrast, lends itself to all kinds of tinkering. Every step
- in that process is controlled by hormones, and much of the
- infertility work done in the '60s and '70s involved finding
- which hormones were out of balance and how to adjust them. A
- woman whose ovaries do not release their eggs properly, for
- example, might be given human chorionic gonadotropin, which
- triggers ovulation. A woman who tends to miscarry may be given
- progesterone, which helps soften the uterine lining to make it
- more receptive.
- </p>
- <p> A widely used drug called Pergonal (menotropin), which for
- years was derived from the urine of postmenopausal Italian nuns,
- is rich in the hormone that stimulates eggs to develop and form
- follicles. This follicle-stimulating hormone usually allows only
- one egg to reach full maturity, but when administered in huge
- doses it can trick the ovaries into producing more than a dozen
- mature eggs in a single cycle. This abundance of eggs is key to
- most assisted-reproduction techniques. By fertilizing large
- numbers of eggs and selecting the healthiest embryos, fertility
- specialists maximize the odds of achieving a successful
- pregnancy.
- </p>
- <p> Hormone treatments can cover a multiple of symptoms. But
- there are any number of problems that don't respond to hormone
- therapy. A woman's Fallopian tubes may be blocked or rendered
- inoperative by scarring from pelvic infections, sexually
- transmitted diseases or bits of tissue leaking out of the
- uterus, a condition called endometriosis. A man may have too few
- sperm that can make the long journey, or his sperm may lack
- specific enzymes needed to clear the passage to the egg. Some
- couples learn late in the game that they are incompatible at a
- cellular level. A woman can be allergic to her husband's sperm;
- her antibodies may destroy her partner's seeds before they get
- a chance to be sown.
- </p>
- <p> There are treatments for each of these conditions. Blocked
- Fallopian tubes can be freed or cleared of obstructions by a
- variety of operations, ranging from laser-beam surgery to
- inflating a tiny balloon within the clogged passage. Men with
- extremely low sperm counts can be helped toward fatherhood by
- artificial insemination, which puts what sperm they have
- directly into the cervix, or by microinjection, which puts a
- single sperm right into the egg. And for couples with
- sperm-allergy problems, a procedure known as sperm washing
- strips the sperm of some of the chemical antigens that trigger
- the allergic reaction.
- </p>
- <p> But most of these treatments have been supplanted by the
- family of techniques known as in vitro fertilization. The beauty
- and power of IVF are that it allows doctors to take many key
- events in reproduction out of the body, where they are subject
- to the vagaries of human biology, and perform them in vitro, "in
- glass." By removing mature eggs from the ovaries, mixing them
- with sperm in a Petri dish and reintroducing the resulting
- embryos directly into the uterus, doctors can bypass most of the
- important barriers to fertility, from low sperm counts to
- nonfunctioning Fallopian tubes.
- </p>
- <p> The status of IVF has undergone a striking transformation
- in the past decade. It used to be considered an option of last
- resort; with success rates running below 5%, most doctors put
- couples through the full gamut of conventional therapies before
- turning to IVF. Today a couple in their 30s with undiagnosed
- infertility is likely to be told to skip invasive tests and
- exploratory surgeries and go straight to in vitro or related
- technologies. Streamlined procedures and lowered costs are part
- of the reason. But it was the development of two variations on
- the basic IVF procedure--GIFT and ZIFT--and the impressive
- success rates they have produced that have made believers of
- most doctors.
- </p>
- <p> The major sticking point of the original procedure, it
- turned out, was that the embryos just wouldn't stick. Helped by
- hormone treatments, a woman might produce dozens of eggs each
- cycle. Her husband's sperm might fertilize 10 of them. But for
- reasons that remained mysterious, the embryos simply refused to
- take root--or implant--on the walls of the uterus. Even the
- best-run clinics were getting success rates not much higher than
- 15% to 20% just five years ago.
- </p>
- <p> Scientists now know that implantation is one of the most
- difficult hurdles in the human reproductive system. It is
- estimated that even among perfectly fertile couples, as many as
- one-third of all pregnancies are lost, before anyone knows they
- have begun, because the embryos fail to implant in the uterus
- wall. Only in the past few years have researchers begun to
- understand why this is so.
- </p>
- <p> A key breakthrough came in the mid-1980s at Dr. Ricardo
- Asch's laboratory at the University of Texas at San Antonio.
- Asch was trying to find a simpler way to do IVF, one that would
- not require the skills of an embryologist, when he hit upon the
- procedure he called gamete intra-Fallopian transfer, or GIFT.
- Rather than attempting fertilization in a Petri dish, he simply
- loaded the sperm and eggs (known to biologists as gametes) into
- a fine pipette and inserted them into the Fallopian tube, where
- he hoped they would take care of business by themselves. Not
- only did they fertilize, but they implanted as well--at a
- much higher rate than he expected.
- </p>
- <p> Scientists attribute the implantation rates of GIFT to the
- way in which the fertilized embryo enters the uterus. In IVF
- the embryo is squirted, rather violently, into a reproductive
- tract that has been pretty roughly treated, first by various
- hormone treatments, then by the egg-retrieval procedure. In
- GIFT, by contrast, the embryo drifts quietly into the uterus,
- much as it would naturally. To further improve the success
- rates, Asch's researchers tried fertilizing the egg in a lab
- dish and then placing the pre-embryo, or zygote, directly into
- the Fallopian tube--a procedure known as ZIFT (zygote
- intra-Fallopian transfer).
- </p>
- <p> The results were startling. Using GIFT and ZIFT, clinics
- were soon reporting implantation rates two to three times as
- high as those achieved in their own IVF facilities. Among
- couples for whom sperm quality is not a factor, a single cycle
- of GIFT or ZIFT at Asch's clinic can result in pregnancy 40% to
- 50% of the time. A healthy, fertile couple trying to conceive
- naturally in any given month has about a 25% success rate.
- </p>
- <p> The latest clue in the mystery of implantation was hit
- upon by scientists working on a completely different problem:
- lazy sperm. Some sperm lack the ability to penetrate the egg's
- outer membrane, or zona pellucida, often as a result of old
- testicular injuries or early exposure to toxic chemicals.
- Several methods have been devised to give these sperm a boost,
- including microinjection (the sperm is inserted directly into
- the egg by means of a microscopic needle) and partial zona
- drilling (a tiny hole is made in the egg's protective shell).
- </p>
- <p> It was while working with patients with severe sperm
- deficiencies that researchers noticed something surprising. Eggs
- whose shells had been poked open were doing a much better job
- of sticking to the uterus wall. In a trial performed by Dr.
- Jacques Cohen, one of the scientists who developed the PZD
- procedure, embryos successfully lodged in the womb at a rate
- more than five times the national average for IVF. "I was so
- excited I couldn't sleep at night," says Cohen. Apparently eggs
- with a hole in their outer membrane somehow benefit from that
- hole. Cohen theorizes that embryos that don't implant may be
- having trouble "hatching" through the shell that housed the
- original egg. The tiny hole Cohen makes to help the sperm get
- in may be helping the embryo get out--and may suggest a method
- for helping increase implantation rates across the board.
- </p>
- <p> In April scientists from Israel and the U.S. reported a
- new finding that may offer yet another way to help infertile
- couples. It had long been assumed that there was no
- communication between egg and sperm until they collided in the
- Fallopian tube. But by closely watching the behavior of sperm
- in test tubes containing the fluid from an egg's follicular sac,
- an interesting effect was observed. A small number of sperm
- seemed to change their swimming patterns in response to
- chemicals secreted by the egg or cells around the egg.
- </p>
- <p> It was not a dramatic effect, and not all eggs emitted
- even this weak chemical signal. But when the researchers
- correlated the results, they discovered a startling pattern:
- only eggs that emitted the "come hither" message were
- successfully fertilized. "This indicated to us that attraction
- may indeed be a key process in fertilization," says Michael
- Eisenbach at Israel's Weizmann Institute of Science. Now
- Eisenbach is trying to find out whether this phenomenon could
- be exploited to help treat the most stubborn infertility cases.
- </p>
- <p> Scientists in South Korea are on the verge of a
- breakthrough in a procedure doctors have been dreaming about for
- some time: the freezing and storage of unfertilized eggs. Sperm
- and embryos are regularly frozen for later use, but not eggs,
- which quickly lose their viability when manipulated outside the
- body. But Dr. Kwang Yul Cha, an endocrinologist at Cha Women's
- Hospital in Seoul, reports that his team has produced two
- pregnancies from eggs matured not in an ovary but in a Petri
- dish--a major step in the eventual perfection of egg freezing.
- Many scientists expect that the procedure will be available
- within the next few years.
- </p>
- <p> That could be a godsend for a young woman facing surgery
- or chemotherapy that would destroy the functioning of her
- ovaries. Such a woman would have the option of putting her
- healthy eggs on ice for future use. That option might also
- appeal to, say, a professional woman inclined to postpone
- childbearing. Theoretically, at least, she could store her best,
- grade-A eggs during her most fertile years and pull them out of
- the deep freezer at a later age should she run into trouble
- conceiving. Not everyone, though, would approve this use of an
- expensive technology.
- </p>
- <p> Even more provocative is a new area of research that
- combines the techniques of in vitro fertilization with the
- latest advances in genetic screening. Abnormalities like
- sickle-cell anemia or cystic fibrosis are present in the genetic
- code from the moment of conception. Since embryos in their
- earliest stages are fairly forgiving--they can lose a cell or
- two without impairing their subsequent development--it is
- theoretically possible to remove a cell from, say, a 16-cell
- embryo, test it for a suspected defect, and get the answer
- before that embryo is inserted into the uterus for implantation.
- </p>
- <p> Embryologists at several U.S. labs are doing just that.
- Doctors at Chicago's Illinois Masonic Medical Center have
- screened embryos from 15 couples who have a known risk of
- carrying such diseases as Tay-Sachs, a rare, crippling condition
- that often results in death by age four. Last week doctors at
- Cornell Medical Center began clinical studies on embryos at risk
- for cystic fibrosis.
- </p>
- <p> These experiments are sure to arouse protests. Today most
- in vitro clinics are very careful never to purposely destroy
- viable embryos. Even when couples agree to freeze embryos, they
- are required to sign an agreement specifying what will happen
- to any embryos they don't need: they can be donated to couples
- that can't produce their own or donated to research. But the
- premise of pre-embryotic genetic testing is that defective
- embryos will be destroyed. If the problem is a debilitating
- disease like Tay-Sachs, this may be justifiable. But what if
- couples choose to reject embryos whose only offense is that they
- are of the wrong sex? "You're dealing with human tissues from
- a human body," says Lynne Lawrence, at the American Fertility
- Society. "Like sex, it tends to cut near and dear to people's
- hearts and raises a red flag."
- </p>
- <p> Society has just begun to wrestle with the financial
- burden of assisted reproduction. "It takes courage and cash,"
- says Dr. Georgeanna Jones, whose work with her husband, Dr.
- Howard Jones, in Norfolk, Va., produced the first IVF baby in
- the U.S. A single in vitro cycle can cost $6,000 to $8,000, a
- burden most medical plans are not eager to share. Nine states
- have passed laws requiring insurance companies to cover the
- cost of infertility treatments, but resistance in the remaining
- states is strong. The question, says Leroy Walters, at
- Georgetown University's Kennedy Institute of Ethics, is "to what
- extent society has a responsibility to assist couples that are
- infertile." In Walters' opinion, society should pay for the
- diagnosis of the problem, "but beyond that, given the cost, I'd
- place the financial responsibility on the couples themselves."
- It may, for instance, be more in society's interest to encourage
- intractably infertile couples to adopt.
- </p>
- <p> The Federal Government has tried to steer clear of
- infertility issues. Under pressure from right-to-life lobbies,
- it quietly cut funds for in vitro research in 1980, despite a
- Health Department study that called such a ban "neither
- justifiable nor wise." Last fall Congress appropriated $3
- million for three contraceptive centers and five infertility
- centers. But because of the government's ban on funding IVF
- research, the scientists haven't been able to begin their work.
- "Britain and Australia are surpassing us in research because of
- the restraints we face in this country," says Harvard's Ryan.
- "The U.S. government has created a moral vacuum."
- </p>
- <p> And where there is a moral vacuum, there are lawsuits.
- Around the country, a number of bizarre court cases have cropped
- up as a result of ambiguities in the rules governing the new
- technologies. In one peculiar case, a wealthy couple died in a
- plane accident, leaving two frozen embryos as their only direct
- heirs; a court decided that the embryos could not inherit the
- estate. In a case that is still pending, a divorced Tennessee
- couple are battling over whether the woman has the right to make
- use of frozen embryos created while the couple were still
- married.
- </p>
- <p> Making matters more confusing for consumers is the fact
- that success rates among the nation's 225 IVF centers vary
- wildly--from zero for new ones to 40% and better at some of
- the top clinics. And infertility specialists are not always what
- they claim to be. Some obstetricians print INFERTILITY on their
- business cards on the strength of three-month residency training
- programs. "They pick up infertility because it's easier than
- delivering babies at 3 a.m.," scoffs Dr. Richard Marrs, who
- headed the ethics committee of the American Fertility Society.
- </p>
- <p> Horror stories abound. It is not unusual for a poorly
- trained physician to schedule advanced infertility treatments--even surgery--on a woman without first checking her
- partner's sperm count. A lawsuit is pending against a physician
- in Torrance, Calif., who is accused of duping patients into
- believing he was performing in vitro fertilization when he
- wasn't even collecting eggs. Consumers are advised to seek
- guidance from either the American Fertility Society, based in
- Birmingham, or Resolve, a national infertility organization with
- headquarters in Somerville, Mass. "You need to be a careful
- consumer," warns Dr. Arthur Wisot, a Redondo Beach, Calif.,
- infertility specialist. "If you're going to invest all your
- life's hopes and dreams, you should at least check out the
- qualifications of the medical group."
- </p>
- <p> Pamela and Jonathan Loew know about investing all their
- hopes and dreams in achieving pregnancy. The Los Angeles couple
- went through a five-year effort that included hormone
- treatment, artificial insemination, an ectopic pregnancy, sperm
- washing and finally GIFT. "Intellectually you know it's a
- medical problem," says Pamela, "but emotionally you can't get
- it out of your mind that you're not like a normal woman."
- </p>
- <p> When Pamela and Jonathan learned during a Las Vegas
- vacation that their first GIFT procedure had failed, they sat
- together in a rental car and cried. "It was pretty devastating,"
- recalls Pam. When Jonathan got a call telling him that their
- second GIFT attempt was successful and that his wife was at long
- last pregnant, he was incredulous: "I couldn't believe that
- after five years we had finally hit the jackpot."
- </p>
- <p> Today the passage of time has dulled the pain. Little
- Alexandra is 17 months old, and her parents are thinking about
- having a second child. They still have 12 frozen embryos saved
- from their second GIFT procedure, and during the next few
- months those embryos will be thawed and inserted, a few at a
- time. But whether it works or not is of much less moment to
- Pamela and Jonathan now than it would have been two years
- earlier. As baby Alex sits in the living room, engrossed in a
- music video playing on the VCR, they know full well that they
- are already ahead of the game.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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