| Researchers have mixed reactions to president's stem cell
decision
By KRISTA CONGER
Like their counterparts throughout
the country, researchers at Stanford Medical Center have mixed
reactions to President George W. Bush's Aug. 9 decision to allow
federal funding to support research on existing human embryonic
stem cell lines. Scientists who had feared a total ban on the
research greeted the news with relief, while others expressed
concern that the number and accessibility of the limited pool of
cells might slow the pace of medical and scientific
research.
Bush's decision prohibits the use
of federal funding to derive new stem cells from existing embryos.
The president additionally restricted the use of federal funds to
those stem cell lines that were created solely for reproductive
purposes, and that had been freely given for scientific research by
the donors without financial or other inducements.
Proponents believe human embryonic
stem cell research holds the key to future therapies for
devastating diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's, as well
as for people who have suffered neurological damage from a stroke
or spinal cord injury. Opponents argue that human embryos should
not be used as material for scientific research. Isolating stem
cells from the embryos, created during in vitro fertilization
procedures, destroys the embryo.
Embryonic stem cells can become
all, or nearly all, cell types in the adult body. Such flexibility
makes it possible that scientists could one day coax isolated stem
cells to become neurons to replace those damaged in Alzheimer's or
Parkinson's diseases, or insulin-secreting cells for
diabetics.
Stem cells found in adults,
including those in the bone marrow that renew the blood and immune
system, can also become other types of cells. Their range of
choices seems to be more limited, though, and at least somewhat
restricted by the type of tissue from which they were derived.
However, recent research by Helen Blau, PhD, professor and chair of
molecular pharmacology at Stanford, has shown that the bone marrow
cells of adult mice can unexpectedly migrate to the brain and
assume characteristics of neurons. Bush devoted $250 million this
year to research investigating the therapeutic potential of stem
cells isolated from animals, adults, and placenta and umbilical
cord blood.
Some scientists and patient
advocates have voiced concern about the number and availability of
viable cultures, or cell lines, of the stem cells. According to the
president, about 60 of these cell lines exist throughout the world,
providing ample research opportunities for scientists without
requiring the destruction of additional embryos. However, many
scientists stress the importance of cataloguing the characteristics
of these cell lines -- most of which have not been documented in
the scientific literature -- and determining if they are widely
available to publicly funded researchers.
Following are comments by Stanford
experts regarding the stem cell decision:
Philip A. Pizzo, MD, dean
of the School of Medicine and professor of pediatrics and of
microbiology and immunology: "While I applaud the care,
precision and thoughtfulness of President Bush's deliberations and
consideration É I am personally discouraged by the
limitations at hand. I fear that this will restrict the progress of
important research and that the current oversight of the federal
government, which is so important to the quality of research, will
be in some ways limited because of the private sector's current
control over the research agenda. Nonetheless, progress has been
made, and I'm very pleased that President Bush has revised his
prior position and is allowing research to continue. It is my hope
that over time, the government will reconsider further expansion of
embryonic stem cell research."
Paul Berg, PhD, professor
emeritus of biochemistry and winner of the 1980 Nobel Prize in
chemistry: "Most of the limitations the president has
imposed will have to be clarified before we know their true impact.
For example, the president's statement that 'more than 60
genetically diverse stem cell lines already exist' caught most
scientists by surprise. The scientific literature contains
information about approximately 10 human embryonic stem cell lines.
It's important to determine if the other 50 or so will be truly
available to publicly funded American research scientists without
restrictions that may impede research progress. It's also unknown
whether the remaining cell lines have been grown and handled in
ways that are compatible with high-quality research, and whether
each line has maintained the capacity to generate every adult cell
type. Nevertheless, my own feeling is that we are far better off
now than we were before the president's decision with respect to
being able to explore the biology and therapeutic utility of human
embryonic stem cells."
Irving Weissman, MD, PhD,
professor of pathology and developmental biology: "I think
the decision is a huge improvement over where we were on April 1,
when it was not clear that we would have any federal funding to do
research on human embryonic stem cell lines. Now the question is
whether the existing cell lines are adequate for what we want do in
the future. For therapeutic purposes, it's very important that the
cells have been grown in a way suitable for use in transplantation,
which is very unlikely. So they're adequate for many things, but
not for all things. There is much more that can and probably should
be done in embryonic stem cell research, and we will see how the
government and the new bioethics committee responds in the coming
months to reasonable requests to create new embryonic stem cell
lines to address these issues."
Helen Blau, PhD, professor
and chair of molecular pharmacology: "I'm glad the
president did not totally ban embryonic stem cell research, which
would have been the worst possible outcome. But I hope he will
loosen the restrictions so that we can fully explore the potential
of this new therapy. This is a nascent field that we know very
little about, and we need to do as much research as possible to
explore the potentials of both embryonic and adult stem cells. I
fear that the current legislation will hinder the development of
this technology, which will then be done in other countries and by
industry - which may not have the same standards of peer review and
quality control as federally funded research, and is not optimal
for the American public."
Barbara Koenig, PhD,
director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics and associate
professor of medicine (pulmonary and critical care): "I
agree with the president that this issue of how we use these cells
is of grave moral consequence and I feel a little frustrated with
the implication that these cells are a magic tool that will cure
diabetes and many other diseases with-in a few weeks. This is far
from the truth. It's also important for the public to realize that
this incredible scientific moment has happened when the health care
system is in a state of collapse. Any new innovations have to be
introduced into the health care system and made available to
everyone who needs them, which will require funding. Finally, I'm
concerned about the fact that these cell are in the hands of the
private sector, where the level of research scrutiny is likely to
be lower than in federally funded institutions."
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