Multiple
Choices: Navigating the Moral Mine Field
Sandra Glahn, ThM
- We didn’t put much thought into the "right and
wrong" of what we were doing. We wanted a baby and either of us
probably would have sacrificed anything for success.
- How many to fertilize, what to do with "leftover
embryos," whether we’d consider using a donor, destroying embryos
without thinking—answering those questions beforehand saved us lots of
stress in the midst of IVF.
Consider how the two Christian couples quoted above handled
their fertility treatment quite differently. Some couples give no thought to the
hidden landmines and charge ahead unprepared. Others, feeling the Lord’s
leading to stay out of the "ethical minefield," end treatment when the
doctor recommends fertility drugs. And then there are those who, armed with good
maps drawn from scripture, pursue medical treatment and closely monitor their
care in striving for the "safe" zone. It is to this last group that
I’ll direct my comments.
How do we make God-honoring choices while staying in
treatment? We begin by understanding that each unique individual is made in the
image of God. It is wrong to take human life (Exodus 20:13)—and an embryo is a
human life.
How do we know this? It’s really not too hard. Life begins
at the single moment when egg and sperm unite, DNA aligns, and the resulting
being begins to function as a coordinated organism. Some infertility specialists
(those who have no problem discarding embryos) argue that if we’re so silly as
to treat tiny embryos as persons, we should also treat tiny sperm as persons
because they’re alive, too. Yet a sperm is not a human life—that is, it is
not a being that functions as a coordinated organism. It has only half of the
DNA necessary for human life, and it has not united with a human egg. As one
expert explains it, "Human embryos are living human beings precisely
because they possess the single defining feature of human life that is lost in
the moment of death—the ability to function as a coordinated organism rather
than merely as a group of living human cells…. Dead bodies may have plenty of
live cells, but their cells no longer function together in a coordinated manner.
We can take living organs and cells from dead people for transplant to patients
without a breach of ethics precisely because corpses are no longer living human
beings. Human life is defined by the ability to function as an integrated
whole—not by the mere presence of living human cells."
An understanding of when life begins and a commitment to
respect the dignity of all human life is essential when making decisions in the
infertility lab. It impacts the choices we make relating to multiple follicles,
multiple embryos, and multiple transfers. Following are some guidelines.
Stop if you get too many follicles in a non-IVF cycle.
The whole point of taking ovulation-inducing drugs is to stimulate a
woman’s follicles, those fluid-filled sacs that contain one ovum apiece.
During an unassisted cycle, a woman’s body normally regulates the process such
that only one follicle matures and releases its egg (ovulation). But fertility
drugs override that regulatory mechanism, allowing maturation of up to forty
follicles. Multiple follicles mean potential multiple embryos.
To avoid high-order multiples, as mid-cycle approaches medical
personnel must monitor follicles daily via ultrasound. A high number of
follicles means a heightened risk of multiple births. If hyperstimulation
occurs, the responsible move is for the couple to abstain from sexual
intercourse (or IUI) and/or for the doctor to stop administering hormones for
that month. (In the case of a patient on clomiphene citrate, the patient has
already taken all the medication for that cycle, so abstinence is the only
option, though it’s extremely rare for such hyperstimulation to happen on
Clomid alone.)
If no sonograms are done, the couple has no idea how many
follicles are present. That means they can have a positive pregnancy test before
they even know they have the potential for multiple pregnancies—as happened in
cases of both octuplets and septuplets. According to ABC News, "While only
one or two multiple births have hit the headlines in recent years, more than 80
cases of multiple births of quintuplets or greater now occur in the United
States each year. In fact, the country’s birth rate for triplets and higher
multiples has nearly quadrupled since 1971." Why? More people are using
ovulation induction medications, many of them unmonitored.
Bottom line: If you’re taking fertility drugs, make sure
your doctor monitors you appropriately via ultrasound so you know the number of
follicles you’re dealing with and can make decisions accordingly. If you end
up with too many maturing follicles, despite the cost invested—sometimes in
the thousands of dollars—patients need to give serious consideration to the
heartbreaking choice of canceling the cycle.
Avoid the creation of multiple embryos.
Let’s say you’ve taken clomiphene citrate during an unmonitored cycle,
followed by a positive pregnancy test. Your HCG levels have skyrocketed. And
when you go for your first ultrasound, the doctor visualizes seven embryos on
the screen. Now you face an agonizing decision: should you abort some of the
babies in hopes that the others will have a better chance of being born healthy
(not to mention minimizing the risk to your own body)? That is what most medical
teams would recommend.
Two couples who profess faith in Christ have faced similar
situations—one the parents of octuplets (one of whom died) and the other the
parents of septuplets. Their difficult choices to carry their children to term
rather than taking human life in utero have demonstrated that "it can be
done." Yet the best ethical solution here is to avoid getting into this
situation! Don’t let the number of mature follicles come as a surprise after
conception. And certainly avoid the mentality that says, "We’ll take the
risk because we can always reduce later if we get too many."
Though about 37 percent of births using advanced reproductive
technologies (ART) are multiples (31 percent twins, 6 percent triplets or more),
in vitro fertilization actually allows for more precise management of the number
of eggs fertilized. After the doctor aspirates the mature eggs from the
follicles, each is placed in its own petri dish. Thus, it’s relatively easy to
limit the number of embryos created by directing your medical team to expose
only the number of eggs to sperm that you can safely carry to term in that cycle
in the event that all embryos implant.
Couples may find themselves facing enormous dilemmas if they
do not consider the ethical ramifications of their choices ahead of time and
choose accordingly. Imagine being in the situation this patient described:
- I was shocked when our doctor aspirated more than
thirty eggs from my ovaries and exposed them all to sperm.
Avoid multiple embryo transfers.
The couple suddenly faced with multiple embryos in the IVF lab (and this
should never come as a surprise!) has little choice but to ask the doctor to
transfer several embryos to the wife’s uterus and cryopreserve the rest. Yet
it’s best to avoid cryopreservation. The freeze/thaw process is hard on
sperm because many of them die; the same is true with eggs. Based on embryo
survival rates, it appears that the freeze/thaw process is hard on embryos,
too.
Depending on what you read, you’ll find that some clinics
have a 50 percent thaw survival rate (half of the embryos survive). Others quote
between 60 and 70 percent (at best three-quarters survive). Clinics with higher
rates often freeze only the "higher quality embryos" in the first
place and discard the rest. Thus the numbers can be deceptive as clinics with
higher ethical standards (those that freeze even the "lesser quality"
embryos rather than discarding) may have lower "success rates" as a
result of their higher regard for human life. This poses a moral dilemma:
- I met with my doctor about IVF. He wants to fertilize as
many eggs as we can—transfer three and freeze the rest. I told him my
concerns about freezing. He said the ones that make it through the thawing
process are the ones that would most likely survive naturally anyway, but
that it’d be unusual if we have any to freeze. He wants to start
immediately, but I’m still uncomfortable. My husband wants to do it the
way the doctor recommends. But why won’t my doctor respect what I am
saying? I think, "Let’s just set our boundaries." At least I
won’t have the moral regret.
Until thaw and conception rates improve following embryo
freezing, couples should consider avoiding cryopreservation by having fewer
eggs fertilized, even though the financial cost may be higher as a result.
That is, they may have to try more IVF cycles with smaller numbers of embryos.
Several clinics in England now focus on natural cycle IVF.
It’s less expensive without the ovulation induction medications, and while the
odds of success in each cycle are lower, couples can try numerous times. Also,
some overseas clinics now limit transfers to one embryo per IVF cycle. In
Sweden, transferring a single embryo is the overriding rule, with only one in
ten transfers allowing transfer of two embryos.* In the U.S., transferring three
to five or more embryos is common, though we are seeing a trend toward
transferring fewer embryos selected for their higher quality (read: discard or
freeze those of "lower quality") with more cell divisions.
While cryopreservation has its problems, it’s still more
ethical to freeze embryos (taking risks with human life) than to discard them
(destroying human life). But sadly the common practice of cryopreservation has
led to 400,000 embryos now sitting in liquid nitrogen. Consider the following
true scenarios that have resulted from cryopreserving numerous embryos:
- My husband and I had several embryos transferred to my
uterus and a bunch frozen. I conceived twins from that original transfer,
but then I had major medical problems during the delivery. That made it
impossible for me to carry any more pregnancies. The cost of a gestational
surrogate: fifty grand!
- We’ve had six kids now through IVF, but we still have
three more frozen embryos. So we’re going back for one more transfer...
- We have three embryos still frozen after four IVF attempts.
We long to quit treatment and we’re broke, but if we do embryo adoption,
another couple could end up with our biological child while we’re still
childless!
Couples with several frozen embryos can face some tough
choices. Respecting the sanctity of human life means giving all embryos a chance
to live rather than letting them thaw and die—eliminating the options of
destruction and research. (Though it might sound noble to donate an embryo for
the furtherance of science, it is unethical to take one life as a means of
trying to improve the quality of another life.)
To give every cryopreserved embryo a chance means transferring
thawed embryos to the genetic mother, entering into an "embryo
adoption" agreement, or procuring the services of a gestational surrogate.
My co-author, William Cutrer, M.D., often notes that an
embryo is not a potential life; it is a life with potential. Couples will find
that some, if not all, members of their medical team will have this reversed.
While sensitive to the fact that clinics are usually evaluated on the basis of
their success rates (and our needs may impact those rates), we must also stand
our ground as consumers needing to make decisions that line up with our belief
systems. Forty years from now, when our doctors have all retired, we’re the
ones who’ll still be living with our multiple choices.
© 2003 Sandra Glahn, Hannah's Prayer (HP) Advisory Board
Member. This first appeared in HP's July 2003 newsletter.

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