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Ed. Note: The following
story is a press release from the National Academies.
April 26, 2005
The National Academies today recommended guidelines for research involving
human embryonic stem cells, and urged all institutions conducting such
research to establish oversight committees to ensure that the new
guidelines will be followed. The guidelines are intended to enhance the
integrity of privately funded human embryonic stem cell research by
encouraging responsible practices, said the committee that wrote the
report, a joint project between the National Academies' National Research
Council and Institute of Medicine.
"Heightened oversight is essential to assure the public that stem cell
research is being carried out in an ethical manner," said committee
co-chair Jonathan D. Moreno, Emily Davie and Joseph S. Kornfeld Professor
of Biomedical Ethics and director of the Center for Biomedical Ethics at
the University of Virginia, Charlottesville. "The oversight we call for
will in many instances set a higher standard than required by existing
laws or regulations. And while we were hesitant to recommend another
bureaucratic oversight entity, the burden in this case is justified, given
the novel and controversial nature of embryonic stem cell research."
"A standard set of requirements for deriving, storing, distributing, and
using embryonic stem cell lines -- one to which the entire U.S. scientific
community adheres -- is the best way for this research to move forward,"
added committee co-chair Richard O. Hynes, Daniel K. Ludwig Professor of
Cancer Research and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge.
Embryonic Stem Cell Research Oversight, or ESCRO, committees should be
established, but not as replacements for other research compliance bodies
such as institutional review boards, the guidelines say. In addition to
experts in biology and stem cell research, ESCRO committees should include
legal and ethical experts as well as representatives of the public.
Stem cells usually are harvested after three to five days from a
blastocyst -- an early stage of development before implantation in the
uterus. The ESCRO committees should review proposals for research that
takes stem cells from excess blastocysts at in vitro fertilization clinics
or from blastocysts created expressly for stem cell research. They also
should review any proposed use of blastocysts created by nuclear transfer,
often referred to as therapeutic cloning. Nuclear transfer must not be
used for reproductive cloning, the guidelines committee said, reiterating
a recommendation from a previous National Academies report.
Proposals to generate additional human embryonic stem cell lines by any
means should be reviewed and approved by an ESCRO committee, the
guidelines say. They add that human embryos used for research should not
be grown in culture for longer than 14 days, or until the point when the
body axis and central nervous system -- called the primitive streak --
begin to form.
Although an ESCRO committee should approve new stem cell research, federal
regulations already require institutional review boards (IRBs) to review
the procurement of all eggs, sperm, or blastocysts to be used in
generating new stem cell lines, and they should continue to do so,
according to the new guidelines. An IRB also should review the donation of
somatic cells to be used in creating a blastocyst via nuclear transfer.
Donor consent must be obtained before a blastocyst is used to generate
stem cells, and donors should be informed that they have the right to
withdraw their consent at any point before a stem cell line is derived,
the guidelines say. Practices for obtaining consent should be scrutinized
for potential conflict of interests; for example, researchers proposing to
derive stem cells should not influence decisions about creating embryos
for fertility treatment. The guidelines also emphasize that no payments
should be made to donors. Blastocysts left over at in vitro fertilization
clinics may not be donated for research without consent, and researchers
should not ask fertility doctors to create more embryos than necessary for
reproductive treatments.
According to the guidelines, donors should be told that information about
them, including their names, may be retained and could become known by
those who derive or work with resulting stem cell lines, but that donors'
identities will be encoded and not readily ascertainable. They should be
asked whether they want to receive information obtained through studies of
the cell lines. Consent forms should inform the donor that embryos will be
destroyed in the process of deriving stem cells and that the resulting
cell lines may be kept for many years. The forms also should state that
cells might be manipulated genetically or transplanted into animals for
preclinical testing. Donors also need to be told that although research
involving their stem cells may have commercial potential, donors will not
share in any financial benefit.
Research on existing anonymous or coded embryonic stem cell lines does not
require IRB review unless the cells are going to be transplanted into
patients or the donor's identity is likely to become known by researchers.
Researchers working on previously derived stem cell lines, however, should
provide documentation on the origin of the cell lines -- including
evidence that the procurement process was reviewed by an IRB -- to newly
formed ESCRO committees, the guidelines committee said.
The ESCRO committee should maintain a registry of stem cell lines banked
at an institution, the guidelines add. The registry should include a proof
of informed consent, a medical history of the donors, and a
characterization of any genetic markers on the cell lines. Repositories of
stem cell lines also need a secure coding system to protect the identity
of donors.
The Academies' guidelines also address how far scientists should go in
mixing human and animal cells to create so-called chimeras, which
researchers may need to do in order to test the therapeutic potential of
human stem cells in animal models. The guidelines say no animal embryonic
stem cells should be transplanted into a human blastocyst, and approval by
an ESCRO committee should be secured before any human embryonic stem cells
are put into an animal. Also, no animal into which human embryonic stem
cells have been introduced should be allowed to breed. In addition, no
human embryonic stem cells should be put into nonhuman primate blastocysts.
Human embryonic stem cells should be introduced into nonhuman mammals only
under circumstances where no other experiment can provide the information
needed, the guidelines say. Experiments in which there is a possibility
that human cells could contribute in a "major organized way" to the brain
of an animal require strong scientific justification, the committee added.
The committee urged the formation of a national independent body to
periodically review whether the guidelines need to be updated in light of
unforeseen advances in stem cell science and evolving public attitudes.
The National Academies developed the guidelines on behalf of the
scientific community and without government involvement. Although
compliance is voluntary, the committee called on private funders,
professional societies, journals, research institutions, and others
involved in embryonic stem cell studies, to require adherence to the
guidelines.
The report was funded by the National Academies with additional support
from the Ellison Medical Foundation and the Greenwall Foundation. The
National Academies consist of the National Academy of Sciences, National
Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine, and National Research
Council. They are private, nonprofit institutions that provide science,
technology, and health policy advice under a congressional charter. A
committee roster follows.
Copies of Guidelines for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research will be
available later this spring from the National Academies Press; tel.
202-334-3313 or 1-800-624-6242 or on the Internet at
http://www.nap.edu. Reporters may obtain
a pre-publication copy from the Office of News and Public Information
(contacts listed above).
[ This news release and report are available at
http://national-academies.org
]
THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES
National Research Council
Division on Earth and Life Studies
Board on Life Sciences
and
Institute of Medicine
Board on Health Sciences Policy
Committee on Guidelines for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research
Richard O. Hynes, Ph.D.1,2 (co-chair)
Investigator
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and
Daniel K. Ludwig Professor of Cancer Research
Center for Cancer Research and Department of Biology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge
Jonathan D. Moreno, Ph.D. (co-chair)
Emily Davie and Joseph S. Kornfeld Professor of Biomedical Ethics, and
Director
Center for Biomedical Ethics
University of Virginia
Charlottesville
Elizabeth Price Foley, J.D., LL.M.
Professor of Law
College of Law
Florida International University
Miami
Norman C. Fost, M.D., M.P.H.
Professor of Pediatrics, and
Director
Program in Medical Ethics
University of Wisconsin
Madison
H. Robert Horvitz, Ph.D.1,2
Investigator
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and
Professor
Department of Biology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge
Marcia Imbrescia
Member
Board of Trustees
Arthritis Foundation
Lynnfield, Mass.
Terry Magnuson, Ph.D.
Sarah Graham Kenan Professor and Chair
Department of Genetics, and
Director
Carolina Center for Genome Sciences
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill
Cheryl Mwaria, Ph.D.
Professor of Anthropology, and
Director of Africana Studies
Hofstra University
Hempstead, N.Y.
Janet Rossant, Ph.D.
Co-Head
Fetal Health and Development Program, and
Director
Centre for Modelling Human Disease
Mount Sinai Hospital
Toronto
Janet D. Rowley, M.D.1,2
Blum-Riese Distinguished Service Professor
Departments of Medicine, Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, and Human
Genetics
University of Chicago
Chicago
STAFF
Frances Sharples, Ph.D.
Study Director
Robin Schoen
Senior Program Officer
Matthew D. McDonough
Program Assistant
1 Member, National Academy of Sciences
2 Member, Institute of Medicine
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