Stem Cell Wars
By Kerby Anderson
The political war
over stem cell research is heating up as evidenced by two recent events in
the media. For the last few weeks, Senate Democrats have blocked action on
a bill that would allow the use of umbilical cord blood in stem cell research.
Although the bill passed the House by a remarkable vote of 431-1, the
democratic
leadership in the Senate would not allow a vote on the measure. The bill was
even endorsed by the Congressional Black Caucus due to the positive appeal
from former basketball star Julius (Dr. J.) Erving.
Also in the news was the decision
by University of Pittsburgh’s Gerald Schatten to
quit the human cloning project of South Korean scientist Dr. Hwang Woo Suk. Dr. Schatten cited ethical
concerns about possible coercion in obtaining eggs from female project staffers.
Dr. Schatten also demanded that his name be removed
from an article he co-wrote with Dr. Hwang for the journal Science because he believes it used fraudulent
photographs in the article.
Background
Stem cells are the
basic cells in our body. They get their name from their similarity to the stem
of a plant which gives rise to branches, bark, and every other part of a plant.
Embryonic stem cells are the cells from which all 210 different kinds of tissue
in the human body originate. As an embryo develops into a blastocyst,
a few layers of cells surround a mass of stem cells. If these stem cells are removed from the blastocyst, they cannot develop as an embryo but can be
cultured and grown into these different tissues.
Stem cells are undifferentiated
and self-replicating cells that have the potential to become the other
differentiated cells in our body. And that is why there is so much scientific
and political attention being paid to stem cells.
The potential for
stem cell research is enormous and intoxicating. Nearly 100 million Americans
have serious diseases that eventually may be treated or even cured by stem cell
research. Many diseases (like Parkinson’s, heart disease, diabetes) result from
the death or dysfunction of a single cell type. Scientists hope that the
introduction of healthy cells of this type will restore lost or compromised
function.
Moral Perspective
The moral problem with the
research is that to obtain human embryonic stem cells, the embryo is destroyed.
Embryos needed for human embryonic stem cell research can be obtained from
three sources: (1) in-vitro fertilization used to produce embryos, (2) frozen
embryos which are spare embryos left over from in-vitro fertilization, or (3)
human cloning of embryos.
In addition to the
moral problem is the scientific reality that embryonic stem cell research has
not been successful. Although human embryonic stem cells have the potential to
become any type of human cell, no one has yet mastered the ability to direct
these embryonic cells in a way that can provide possible therapy for humans
afflicted with various diseases.
Numerous stories are surfacing of the problems with human embryonic stem cells. One example took place in China where scientists implanted human embryonic stem cells into a patient suffering from Parkinson’s only to have them transform into a powerful tumor that eventually killed him.
The Media and Truth
Often the media has not been telling
the truth about embryonic stem cell research. So why hasn’t the media accurately
covered this issue? “To start with, people
need
a fairy tale,” said Ronald D.G. McKay, a stem cell researcher at the National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. “Maybe that’s unfair, but
they need a story line that’s relatively simple to understand.”
What has been lost in all of this
discussion is the humanity of the unborn.
Proponents of embryonic stem cell research argue that an embryo or fetus
is a “potential” human life. Yet at
every stage in human development (embryo, fetus, child, adult), we retain our
identity as human beings. We are humans
from the moment of conception. We do not
have the right to dismember a human embryo because its
unwanted or located in a test tube in a fertility clinic.
Also lost in this discussion is
the success of using stem cells from sources other than embryos. Successful clinical trials have shown that
adult stem cells as well as umbilical cord blood have been very effective. These
sources may provide cures for such diseases as multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid
arthritis, systematic lupus, etc. Some
studies seem to indicate that adult stem cells create “fewer biological
problems” than embryonic ones.
No moral concerns
surround the use of human adult stem cells since they can be obtained from the
individual requiring therapy. And using blood from umbilical cords of newborns
does not raise any significant concerns because the newborn is not harmed in
any way.
In the last few
years, stem cells have also been found in tissues previously thought to be
devoid of them (e.g., neural tissue, nasal passages). And human adult stem
cells are also more malleable than previously thought. For example, bone marrow
stem cells can produce skeletal muscle, neural, cardiac muscle, and liver
cells. Bone marrow cells can even migrate to these tissues via the circulatory
system in response to tissue damage and begin producing cells of the
appropriate tissue type.
Human adult stem cell research is
already effective and raises none of the moral questions of human embryonic
stem cell research. Even biotech industry proponents of embryonic stem cell
research believe that we may be twenty years away from developing commercially
available treatments using embryonic stem cells.
All
of this, however, seems lost on some in Congress who continue to push for
additional funding of embryonic stem cell research. When democratic leaders
in the Senate hold up a cord blood bill that will help people just to get
a vote on an embryonic stem cell bill, they clearly have the wrong priorities.
Adult stem cell research is already effective. Embryonic stem cell research
is not.
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Kerby Anderson is the President Probe
Ministries, author of numerous books including his most recent book, Moral
Dilemmas, written at the request of
Chuck Swindoll, and author of articles and editorials
appearing in Dallas Morning News,
Miami Herald, San Jose Mercury, and Houston Post. He is also the guest host of radio talk shows Point of View and Open Line.