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Third Party Parenting
By Michael Feinman, M.D., F.A.C.O.G.
Board Certified, Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility
Since the very first IVF
procedure, the theoretical ability to perform donor
egg cycles or gestational surrogacy
has existed. It took doctors and society a few years
to realize this fact and get comfortable with the concept.
Considering the wide variation in the legal status of
egg donation and surrogacy
throughout the world, it is also clear that not
all societies have gotten comfortable with these procedures.
In the US, especially in California, these procedures
are helping many couples have children when they may
not have been able to in the past. In addition, their
high success rates demonstrate the true potential of
assisted reproduction when all factors have been optimized.
This article will review the medical
indications for both donor egg and surrogacy. We will
briefly consider how egg donors and surrogate mothers
are chosen and screened. Since the process for donor
egg and gestational surrogacy are actually similar,
we will discuss them together. Finally, a few thoughts
about the legal and ethical aspects of third party parenting
will be considered.
Donor
Egg Cycles
The first donor egg cycles reported
were actually donor embryo cycles, where frozen embryos
from one couple were transferred to the uterus of another
woman. These early reports proved that women could carry
a pregnancy, even if they had no ovarian
function. From these humble beginnings, there are
now an estimated 2500 donor egg cycles were performed
annually in the US. In 2003, Huntington Reproductive
Center performed approximately 200 donor
egg cycles. In the early years, each center devised
rather casual arrangements to provide egg donors. With
the increasing demand for donor egg, and increased public
scrutiny, more formal procedures are used to find and
screen donors.
Indications
for Donor Egg
Women who benefit from donor egg
can be divided into two groups: non-menstruating and
menstruating females. Non-menstruating candidates are
women with premature ovarian failure or physiologically
menopausal women. The medical necessity and benefits
of egg donation to these women is clear. Society is
still struggling with the question with establishing
an upper age limit for the latter group. Menstruating
women who may benefit from donor egg include:
-
Women with waning ovarian function. These women
may have high baseline FSH levels or respond poorly
to ovarian stimulation when they try IVF.
- "Older" women. As women
mature, a higher percentage of the eggs they ovulate
contain abnormal chromosome numbers. Women over age
43 almost never conceive with their own eggs through
IVF, and eventually need to consider egg donors.
- Women with poor egg quality.
Some women who experience multiple IVF failures may
produce poor quality embryos, regardless of their
age and FSH levels. These women often conceive with
donor eggs.
- Women who carry genetic or chromosomal
abnormalities. Examples of these conditions are recessive
traits like cystic fibrosis, dominant traits such
as Huntington's Disease, and balanced translocations.
In many cases women with these conditions can now
use their own eggs with the help of preimplantation
genetic diagnosis (PGD). If, for any reason, PGD
is unacceptable, egg donation becomes an option for
some.
Now What?"
The recipient and egg donor both
require screening. An often understated issue is the
enormous psychological struggles and pain that a couple
will endure as they grapple with the reality of abdicating
the woman's genetic ties to their child. Most of these
couples should have a session with a psychologist to
discuss these issues. When these issues are resolved
appropriately, couples can better focus on their primary
objective, which is to start or enlarge their family.
Both partners must undergo an infectious
disease screen that includes, but is not limited to
HIV, HTLV, hepatitis B and C, syphilis, gonorrhea, and
Chlamydia. We are encouraging the male partner to undergo
genetic screening for conditions that may be more common
in his ethnic group. Examples include cystic fibrosis,
Tay-Sachs disease and sickle cell disease. Uterine pathology,
such as fibroids and polyps, should be ruled out through
hysterosalpingogram, sonohysterogram, or hysteroscopy.
Finding a suitable egg donor may
be difficult for many couples. Occasionally younger
friends, sisters, or relatives may be interested in
helping. Most couples do not have these people available
and we work with agencies that recruit egg donors and
provide legal contracts and short-term health insurance
policies for the donors. Experienced agencies recruit
egg donors from college campuses, professional or acting
trade journals, etc. Most of these agencies maintain
Internet sites that allow couples dealing with infertility to view the donors
in the privacy of their own homes.
Couples focus on physical characteristics,
IQ information, age, overall health history, and whether
or not the woman has been a donor before. Some ethicists
and physicians have criticized the agency system for
commercializing the process. While agencies provide
a useful service, they have also created egg donor "fee
inflation." As agencies compete for the same pool
of potential donors, they begin raising the donor fees
to attract women to their agency. This plays right into
the hands of the critics.
Currently, egg donors are receiving
an average of $5,000 per cycle. This fee was supposed
to compensate them for time, effort, and discomfort.
As the fees go higher, they clearly go beyond this goal.
The news media has reported stories on some women receiving
as much as $50,000 because they claim super model/genius
status. At Huntington Reproductive Center, we strongly
discourage such practices and encourage our patients
to seek appropriately compensated egg donors, rather
than be held hostage to these situations. A brilliant,
gorgeous, athletic woman does not necessarily produce
similar children!
Once a donor is selected, she will
undergo a medical evaluation. She and her partner are
screened for infectious diseases, like the recipients.
She also takes a drug screen. A thorough genetic/family
history is taken to look for any possible genetic traits
that the donor may not be aware of. Obviously, this
feature requires the donor to understand her family
history and be honest about it.
Results of Donor
Egg
In general, results with donor egg
IVF in appropriately selected couples are excellent. When
discussing results, it is important to distinguish pregnancy
rates per egg retrieval and per embryo transfer. Most
egg donors produce 10 or more eggs. Our results show
that success rates do not improve greatly by transferring
more than 2 embryos to the recipient's uterus, in most
cases. Thus, most donor egg cycles produce several extra
embryos for freezing.
At HRC, our success
rates with fresh donor egg cycles average around
50% per embryo transfer. Our results with frozen embryos
are not much lower, so the added success rate of the
fresh plus frozen transfers exceeds 75%. This cumulative
success rate is the same as the pregnancy rate per egg
retrieval procedure. When a couple fails to achieve
a pregnancy with egg donation, the situation can be
quite overwhelming due to the high expectation of success
and the substantial drain on financial resources. Our
group is always cognizant of these realities and every
attempt is made to work with couples in the event of
failure to help them continue in the donor program,
unless it appears that the failures are due to an underlying
medical problem in the recipient, which obviously needs
to be addressed and resolved.
In general, surrogacy has not gained
widespread acceptance in most of the world. Almost all
European countries, Japan, and Australia forbid the
practice. Some of these countries allow "altruistic"
surrogacy if no financial compensation is involved.
"Traditional surrogacy" refers to artificial
insemination of a surrogate mother with the semen of
the intended father. In contrast, gestational surrogacy
involves the production of embryos through IVF, using
the eggs and sperm of the intended parents, and transferring
the embryos to the uterus of the surrogate. Most surrogacy
performed these days is the latter type, so we will
focus on gestational surrogacy here.
In general, gestational surrogacy
is indicated when a woman can produce viable embryos,
but cannot carry a pregnancy. Examples include:
- Previous hysterectomy
- Congenital absence of the uterus
- Congenital malformations of the
uterus
- DES uterus
- Uterine pathology such as fibroids
or scarring of the cavity
- Maternal disease that makes pregnancy
dangerous, such as severe diabetes, renal failure,
lupus, or rheumatoid arthritis
- Rh Isoimmunization
- Some breast cancers (there are
differences of opinion here)
- Multiple IVF failures
with good embryo quality
Since there are potentially significant legal, financial,
ethical, and psychological issues with surrogacy,
we encourage couples to work with agencies that have
experience in selecting surrogate mothers and provide
the infrastructure to deal with these issues. Surrogate
mothers should have at least one biological child
that they have raised. Compared to egg donors, surrogate
mothers undergo a much more intensive psychological
assessment. Most applicants are rejected following
this initial evaluation. After completing the psychological
evaluation, the candidate undergoes a medical evaluation,
similar to the one performed on egg donor recipients.
A good contract between the gestational
surrogate and her couple is critical. Examples of covered
issues are: How many embryos can be transferred? What
happens if there is a multiple pregnancy? Will the surrogate
permit a termination if an abnormal fetus is discovered?
Health insurance, life insurance, clothing allowances
are discussed. Agreements regarding nutrition, smoking,
travel, and other behaviors may be covered. The couple
and the surrogate remain in contact throughout the pregnancy.
Surrogacy is about relationships, and this aspect can
be very rewarding to all parties involved.
Results
of Surrogacy
In general, results with gestational
surrogacy are excellent, but vary according to the
age of the egg provider. In a given age group, results
with surrogacy tend to be higher than with routine IVF.
This is largely due to patient selection. Proper selection
of candidates implies that these women could have children
on their own, if it were not for the medical problem that
lead them to surrogacy. Good embryos placed into a well-prepared,
proven uterus theoretically optimizes the IVF process.
How
the Surrogacy Process Works
In reality, egg
donation and gestational
surrogacy are similar techniques. The only difference
is who goes home with the baby! In general terms there
is an egg provider, and a recipient. The cycles of the
two women are synchronized using a combination of birth
control pills and Lupron. Upon stopping the pills, the
egg provider begins using one of the brands of injectable
gonadotropins to stimulate multiple egg production.
The use of these drugs requires
several office visits for blood and ultrasound monitoring
to determine how many eggs are being produced and when
they are likely to be mature. When the follicles seem
large enough, a single injection of hCG is given. The
transvaginal ultrasound guided egg retrieval is timed
to this injection. Most centers perform this procedure
with conscious sedation, especially with egg donors.
While the egg provider is taking
her injections
of FSH, the recipient begins twice weekly injections
of estrogen. Around the time of the retrieval, the recipient
adds some combination of vaginal and injectable progesterone,
thus creating an artificial cycle timed to the egg provider's
cycle. The eggs are combined with the sperm from the
intended father, and three days later a small number
of embryos is transferred to the recipient's uterus.
Since success rates are rather high, we discourage transferring
large numbers of embryos, and in many of our egg donor
cycles, or surrogacy cycles with young eggs, we often
transfer two embryos with excellent results. Extra embryos
can be frozen for future use.
As with any medical procedure, there
is a small potential for risk. For the egg provider,
the retrieval procedure can cause internal bleeding
or infection. We give prophylactic antibiotics to greatly
reduce the risk of infection. Occasionally, the egg
provider experiences the complication of hyperstimulation
syndrome. This results from an overabundant response
to the stimulation drugs. When this occurs, women experience
significant abdominal distention and pain. Since these
women will not be pregnant, the symptoms quickly recede
with the menses, and most of these women can be managed
successfully on an outpatient basis.
In contrast, egg donor recipients
and surrogates face few risks from their procedures.
The main risks are associated with pregnancy itself,
and multiple births are an important issue. That is
why it is important to use caution when deciding how
many embryos to transfer in these often optimal situations.
Conclusion
While many ethical questions
are still being debated in society, third-party parenting,
when applied appropriately, can help many couples have
a family that they otherwise could not achieve. The
high success rates seen in our third-party parenting
program demonstrates the true potential of assisted
reproductive procedures, when all elements of the reproductive
process are optimized.
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