Stem Cell Research
Stem Cell Research
Stem Cell Research
Research with embryonic stem cells may lead to new, more effective treatments for
serious human ailments and alleviate the suffering of thousands of people. Diseases such
as juvenile diabetes, Parkinson’s disease, heart failure and spinal cord injuries are
examples.
Bone marrow transplants have been performed for decades and involve the infusion of
adult stem cells. Research based on embryonic and adult stem cells has yielded promising
results for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease and diabetes. Stem cell research also has
generated new knowledge about basic cell mechanisms that is critical to understanding
the causes of disease, such as cancer.
Some have criticized embryonic stem cell research by arguing that adult stem cells have
delivered more treatments, but that observation is misleading. While adult stem cells have
been studied for decades, human embryonic stem cells were first isolated in 1998. There
has not yet been time to develop new therapies using embryonic stem cells.
The overwhelming majority of stem cell scientists believe that to make the most rapid
progress against disease, researchers must use all the weapons in their arsenal. That
means using both embryonic and adult stem cells.
How long will it take for human embryonic stem cell research to yield medical
treatments?
We can’t say how long it will take to find new treatments for any specific disease using
embryonic stem cells. Biomedical research typically has a time frame of 10, 20, even 30
years. Fourteen years elapsed between the first unsuccessful clinical trial of bone marrow
transplantation and the first successful transplant among unrelated patients. Now bone
marrow transplants are widely touted as the best example of a successful stem cell
therapy.
Biomedical research takes a long time, but the sooner the research starts, the sooner it
will yield new insights and new treatments. If research were stopped by uncertainty, we
never would have developed blood transfusions, cardiac bypass surgery, insulin therapy
for diabetes, kidney dialysis, antibiotics, organ transplants and many other treatments we
now take for granted.
Embryo and Fetus Definitions
What is a fetus?
An embryo becomes a fetus about eight weeks into gestation, when specific tissues and
organs have started to form.
Cloning
When discussing stem cells and cloning, it is important to distinguish between
reproductive cloning and what scientists call therapeutic cloning.
Public Opinion
Ethics
What do you say to those who oppose embryonic stem cell research on moral
grounds?
We respect the values of people who hold this view. However, most Americans believe
this research can be conducted ethically. Many see it as a pro-life position because this
research has the potential to alleviate the suffering of thousands of people.
Federally Approved Stem Cell Lines
Why do you need to create new stem cells lines? What’s wrong with the stem cell
lines approved by the federal government?
U.S. scientists can use federal funding only for research using government-approved
embryonic stem cell lines, which were created on or before August 9, 2001. But most of
those lines, it was later determined, do not contain viable embryonic stem cells. And all
of them are contaminated with animal products. In addition, the approved lines don’t
carry the genetic defects that make it possible to model inherited human diseases.
Furthermore, it has recently been discovered that many of these embryonic stem cell lines
don’t come close to mirroring the diversity that’s present in American society or in
Michigan country.
Myth
Adult stem cells are as useful as embryonic stem cells.
Fact
Embryonic stem cells have the ability to create any cell type in the human body. Adult
stem cells are more specialized; they generally make cells only from their tissue of origin.
Thus, embryonic stem cells can do things that adult stem cells cannot do. To maximize
the chances of discovering new cures, it is essential to pursue research on both embryonic
and adult stem cells.
Myth
We don’t need embryonic stem cell research because of the recent breakthrough enabling
scientists to “reprogram” human skin cells into cells that behave like embryonic stem
cells.
Fact
Scientists agree it is too early to assess the technique’s full potential and determine
whether the reprogrammed cells are functionally equivalent to embryonic stem cells. In
addition, the technique can cause mutations that predispose cells to cancer. As a result,
some scientists are concerned that the reprogrammed cells will never be suitable for use
in patients. For the foreseeable future, stem cell researchers agree that research should
continue along all avenues, using embryonic stem cells, adult stem cells, and
reprogrammed cells.
Myth
Adult stem cells have been proven effective in treating more than 70 diseases.
Fact
While adult stem cell research holds much promise, blood stem cells offer the only
proven adult stem cells therapies. The claim that adult stem cells have been used to cure
more than 70 diseases has been widely discredited.
Myth
Stem cells from amniotic fluid and umbilical cord blood can be used instead of
embryonic stem cells.
Fact
Amniotic fluid and umbilical cord blood contain adult stem cells. They hold promise for
therapy but do not have the properties or potential of embryonic stem cells.
Myth
The stem cell lines approved by the federal government provide an adequate source of
embryonic stem cells for research.
Fact
The approved stem cell lines were created on or before Aug. 9, 2001. Scientists later
determined that those lines are contaminated with animal proteins. In addition, none of
the approved lines was created to model human disease. Although President Bush
initially intended to make more than 70 federally approved lines available to scientists,
most of these lines turned out to be inadequately characterized, and only 16 such lines
remain. Furthermore, many of these lines come from a single clinic in Israel, thus they do
not mirror the ethnic and racial diversity in American society.
Myth
Religious people oppose embryonic stem cell research.
Fact
Some religious people are in opposition. Others believe that embryonic stem cell research
is pro-life and that it is immoral not to pursue this research, because of its potential to
reduce human suffering. Most religious traditions, including Judaism, Hinduism, Islam,
Buddhism, and some branches of Christianity do not consider embryonic stem cell
research to be immoral.
Myth
Embryonic stem cell research uses embryos that have begun to develop as babies.
Fact
Stem cells are derived from blastocysts that have only developed for about five days after
fertilization. The blastocysts used for this research develop entirely in laboratory dishes in
fertility clinics and are never implanted in a woman’s uterus. These early stage
embryos consist of about 100 cells and are the size of the period at the end of this
sentence. At this stage, the cells are undifferentiated: They have no nervous system, no
heart, no limbs and no specialized human tissues.
Myth
Embryonic stem cell research uses aborted fetuses.
Fact
There is no connection between abortion and human embryonic stem cells. By the time a
human embryo has implanted in the uterus, its cells have specialized to the point where
they can no longer be used for the derivation of embryonic stem cell lines.
The embryos used to derive stem cells are created in dishes in fertility clinics. They are
never transferred into the human body and are donated for medical research only when
parents decide they are no longer needed for fertility treatment.
Myth
Embryos discarded by fertility clinics could be donated to another family rather than
discarded or used for research.
Fact
Snowflake Children is a term used to describe some babies born from leftover IVF clinic
embryos donated to other infertility patients. But the Snowflakes Frozen Embryo
Adoption Program claims fewer than 200 births since it began in 1997. Meanwhile,
thousands of leftover embryos are discarded each year and more than 400,000 embryos
are currently frozen in fertility clinics; most will eventually be discarded.
Many embryos created for IVF are discarded because they do not develop normally or are
known to carry serious genetic abnormalities. Such embryos are not suitable for
implantation. But in the laboratory, these defective embryos could help researchers
understand genetically linked diseases and develop treatments for them.
Myth
Stem cell research is unregulated and unrestricted, thus paving the way for scientists to
go down a dangerous path.
Fact
This research is extensively regulated under federal laws (National Institutes of Health,
Food and Drug Administration, Institutional Review Boards, and more), and guidelines
from the National Academies and the International Society for Stem Cell Research. There
are additional restrictions being introduced in a Michigan ballot proposal. For example,
under this ballot proposal, embryos could not be bought or sold, could only be generated
for the purpose of fertility treatment, and then could only be used for stem cell research if
they could no longer be used for fertility treatment and were donated with the informed
consent of the donor.