Chin Alexis Heng Boon, Lim Lee Wei, Muhsin Sayyed Mohamed
Singapore Fertility and IVF Consultancy Pvt Ltd, Singapore.
School of Biomedical Sciences, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Pok Fu Lam, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, People's Republic of China.
J Med Ethics. 2024 May 13. doi: 10.1136/jme-2023-109195.
Singapore, a highly affluent island city-state located in Southeast Asia, has increasingly leveraged new assisted reproductive technologies (ART) to overcome its dismal fertility rates in recent years. A new frontier in ART is preimplantation genetic testing (PGT) for polygenic risk scores (PRS) to predict complex multifactorial traits in IVF (in vitro fertilisation) embryos, such as type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and various other characteristics like height, intelligence quotient (IQ), hair and eye colour. Unlike well-known safety risks with human genome editing, there are negligible risks with PGT-P, because there are no man-made genetic modifications that can be transmitted to future generations. Nevertheless, the current efficacy of using PGT-P to select IVF embryos for either increased or decreased probability of developing specific polygenic traits is still far from certain. Hence, the regulatory safeguards proposed here will be based on the assumption that the efficacy of this new technology platform has already been validated. These include: (1) restricting the application of PGT-P only for prevention of clinically relevant polygenic disease traits, (2) securely blocking patients' access to the raw genomic DNA sequencing data of their IVF embryos, (3) validating diagnosis of polygenic disease traits in the prospective parents/grandparents of IVF embryos, and restricting PGT-P only for preventing specifically diagnosed polygenic disease traits and (4) mandating rigorous and comprehensive genetic counselling for IVF patients considering PGT-P. There is an urgent and dire need to prevent abuse of the PGT-P technique, as well as protect the interests and welfare of patients if its clinical application is to be permitted in the country.
新加坡是位于东南亚的一个高度富裕的岛屿城邦国家,近年来越来越多地利用新的辅助生殖技术(ART)来克服其令人沮丧的生育率。ART的一个新前沿是针对多基因风险评分(PRS)的植入前基因检测(PGT),以预测体外受精(IVF)胚胎中的复杂多因素性状,如2型糖尿病、心血管疾病以及身高、智商(IQ)、头发和眼睛颜色等各种其他特征。与人类基因组编辑众所周知的安全风险不同,PGT-P的风险可以忽略不计,因为不存在可遗传给后代的人为基因改造。然而,目前使用PGT-P选择IVF胚胎以增加或降低特定多基因性状发生概率的效果仍远不确定。因此,这里提出的监管保障措施将基于该新技术平台的有效性已经得到验证这一假设。这些措施包括:(1)将PGT-P的应用仅限于预防临床相关的多基因疾病性状;(2)安全地阻止患者获取其IVF胚胎的原始基因组DNA测序数据;(3)在前瞻性IVF胚胎的父母/祖父母中验证多基因疾病性状的诊断,并将PGT-P仅限于预防特定诊断的多基因疾病性状;(4)对考虑使用PGT-P的IVF患者强制进行严格和全面的遗传咨询。如果要在该国允许PGT-P的临床应用,迫切需要防止该技术被滥用,并保护患者的利益和福祉。