found this in this mornings newspaper...
World-first IVF embryo test
From: The Sunday Mail (Qld) By Ainsley Pavey
May 14, 2006
A BRISBANE couple is set to give birth to a designer baby hand-picked from a test tube as part of a world-first IVF test.
The test, developed for Brisbane's City Fertility Centre, is set to revolutionise the booming IVF industry by allowing couples to select disease-free embryos.
They will also be able to pick the gender, and safeguard against lab mix-ups by providing a DNA swab to match with the embryos.
The test, available nationally from July 1, involves taking a single cell from a three-day-old embryo and screening it for chromosome abnormalities which can lead to miscarriage and diseases, including cystic fibrosis and Down, Edwards and Patau syndromes.
The molecular technology, known as MF-PCR or multiplex fluorescent polymerase chain reaction, will cut down the time it takes to scan embryos for abnormalities to just a few hours.
The $500 test is also predicted to slash the cost of IVF treatments from up to $20,000 each.
Advertisement:
CFC medical director Glenn Sterling said the test wasn't about producing "designer babies": ""We are examining embryos, not interfering with the genetic make-up. So many women go through IVF and they don't get pregnant, miscarry, or have a baby with major complications, and now they can go, 'Let's get pregnant the first time and not go through the heartache'."
The test took Griffith University's Prof Ian Findlay and scientists from South Australia-based company Gribble Molecular Science eight years to develop.
I found this interesting, but interested to hear your opinions...
Pete
World-first IVF embryo test
From: The Sunday Mail (Qld) By Ainsley Pavey
May 14, 2006
A BRISBANE couple is set to give birth to a designer baby hand-picked from a test tube as part of a world-first IVF test.
The test, developed for Brisbane's City Fertility Centre, is set to revolutionise the booming IVF industry by allowing couples to select disease-free embryos.
They will also be able to pick the gender, and safeguard against lab mix-ups by providing a DNA swab to match with the embryos.
The test, available nationally from July 1, involves taking a single cell from a three-day-old embryo and screening it for chromosome abnormalities which can lead to miscarriage and diseases, including cystic fibrosis and Down, Edwards and Patau syndromes.
The molecular technology, known as MF-PCR or multiplex fluorescent polymerase chain reaction, will cut down the time it takes to scan embryos for abnormalities to just a few hours.
The $500 test is also predicted to slash the cost of IVF treatments from up to $20,000 each.
Advertisement:
CFC medical director Glenn Sterling said the test wasn't about producing "designer babies": ""We are examining embryos, not interfering with the genetic make-up. So many women go through IVF and they don't get pregnant, miscarry, or have a baby with major complications, and now they can go, 'Let's get pregnant the first time and not go through the heartache'."
The test took Griffith University's Prof Ian Findlay and scientists from South Australia-based company Gribble Molecular Science eight years to develop.
I found this interesting, but interested to hear your opinions...
Pete