The good news you never hear
The Politics of Stem Cells
By Wesley J. Smith
Editor's note. Mr. Smith, an attorney by training, is arguably the finest
"popular" critic of euthanasia, including specifically assisted
suicide. At the same time he strips away the reassuring rhetoric employed by
pro-euthanasia forces, Smith also writes in language that the intelligent
layperson can use to fight euthanasia.
In this edition of National Right to Life News, we're discussing his new book,
"Culture of Death: The Assault on Medical Ethics in America." (See
editorial, page 2.)
We're also reprinting with permission Mr. Smith's examination of another muddled
bioethical issue.
The essay first appeared in the Weekly Standard.
Stem
cells are undifferentiated "master cells" in the body that can develop
into differentiated tissues, such as bone, muscle, nerve, or skin. Stem cell
research may lead to exponential improvements in the treatment of many terminal
and debilitating conditions, from cancer to Parkinson's to Alzheimer's to
diabetes to heart disease. Indeed, breakthroughs in stem cell research reported
just in the last six months take one's breath away:
* Italian scientists have generated muscle tissue using rat stem cells, a
discovery that may have significant implications for organ transplant therapy.
* University of South Florida researchers report that rats genetically
engineered to have strokes were injected with rat stem cells that
"integrated seamlessly into the surrounding brain tissue, maturing into the
type of cell appropriate for that area of the brain." The potential for
stem cell treatments to alleviate stroke symptoms such as slurred speech and
dizziness - - therapy that would not require surgery - - has the potential to
dramatically improve the treatment of many neurological diseases.
* The group of scientists who achieved worldwide fame for cloning Dolly
the sheep has successfully created heart tissue using cow stem cells. The
experiment demonstrated that stem cells could be transformed into differentiated
bodily tissues, offering great impetus to further research.
* Scientists at Enzo Biochem, Inc., inserted anti-HIV genes into human
stem cells. The stem cells survived, grew, and developed into a type of white
blood cell that is affected adversely by HIV infection. In the laboratory, these
treated cells blocked HIV growth. The next step is human trials, in which stem
cell therapy will be attempted using bone marrow transplantation techniques
currently effective in the treatment of some cancers.
What will surprise many people is that none of these remarkable achievements
relied on the use of stem cells from embryos or the products of abortion.
Indeed, all of these experiments involved adult stem cells or undifferentiated
stem cells obtained from other non-embryo sources.
The rat muscle tissue in the first example was generated using adult rat brain
cells. The brain tissue generated in the Florida research was obtained using
human stem cells found in umbilical cord blood, material usually discarded after
birth and a potentially inexhaustible source of stem cells, since four million
babies are born in the United States alone each year. Dolly's creators obtained
cow heart tissue by reprogramming adult cow skin tissue back into its primordial
stem cell state and thence to cardiac cells. The exciting HIV experiments were
conducted using stem cells found in the patients' own bone marrow, spleen, or
blood.
The opportunities for developing successful therapies from stem cells that do
not require the destruction of human embryos should be very big news. But where
are the headlines?
These and other successful experiments have been all but drowned out by
breathless stories extolling the miraculous potential of embryonic stem cell
research.
How many readers are aware, for example, that French doctors recently
transformed a heart patient's own thigh muscle into contracting muscle cells?
When these cells were injected into the patient's damaged heart, they thrived
and, in association with bypass surgery, substantially improved the patient's
heartbeat. Such research is now on the fast track, offering great hope for
cardiac patients everywhere.With all of the hype surrounding embryo research, it
is important to note that embryo stem cell research - - and its first cousin,
fetal tissue experiments - - may not actually produce the therapeutic benefits
its supporters have told us to anticipate. Such worries are not mere
speculation. The March 8, 2001, New England Journal of Medicine reported
tragic side effects from an experiment involving the insertion of fetal brain
cells into the brains of Parkinson's disease patients.
The patients thus treated showed modest if any overall benefits by comparison
with a control group who underwent "sham surgeries" without receiving
fetal tissue. But over time, some 15 percent of the patients who had received
the transplants experienced dramatic over-production of a chemical in the brain
that controls movement.
The results, in the words of one disheartened researcher, were " utterly
devastating," with the unfortunate patients exhibiting permanent
uncontrollable movements: writhing, twisting, head- jerking, arm flailing, and
constant chewing. One man was so badly affected he no longer can eat, requiring
the insertion of a feeding tube.
While some studies using stem cells culled from embryos to treat
Parkinson's-type symptoms in mice have been encouraging, grafts of fetal and
embryonic tissue may provoke the body's immune response, leading to rejection of
the tissue and potentially death, since once the cells are injected they cannot
be extracted. Even more alarming, a May 1996 Neurology article disclosed
a patient's death caused by an experiment in China in which fetal nerve cells
and embryo cells were transplanted into a human Parkinson's patient.
After briefly improving, the patient died unexpectedly. His autopsy showed that
the tissue graft had failed to generate new nerve cells to treat his disease as
had been hoped. Worse, the man's death was caused by the unexpected growth of
bone, skin, and hair in his brain, material the authors theorized resulted from
the transformation of undifferentiated stem cells into non- neural, and
therefore deadly, tissues.
Even some of the most enthusiastic boosters of embryo stem cell research see
trouble ahead. For example, University of Pennsylvania bioethicist Glenn McGee
admitted to Technology Review, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology
publication, "The emerging truth in the lab is that pluripotent stem cells
are hard to rein in. The potential that they would explode into a cancerous mass
after a stem cell transplant might turn out to be the Pandora's box of stem cell
research." Thus, it could be that adult tissue-specific stem cells are
actually safer than their counterparts culled from embryos since, being
extracted from mature cells, they may not exhibit the propensity for
uncontrolled differentiation.
These concerns arise just as the long-time ban on using federal funds for
research that destroys human embryos is under renewed scrutiny. That
long-standing ban was effectively reinterpreted out of existence in the waning
months of the Clinton administration, and the National Institutes of Health are
currently accepting grant proposals for research using embryos originally
created for in vitro fertilization but now deemed "in excess of
clinical need." The new administration is taking a long, hard look at the
policy; during the campaign, George W. Bush declared his opposition to research
that involved destroying human embryos.All of this raises intriguing questions:
Why is federal funding for embryo and fetal research pushed so hard and so
publicly - - while adult stem cell and other alternative therapies are damned
with faint praise? Why do the media applaud fetal stem cell experiments and
provide klieg-light coverage of stories promoting the use of embryos, while they
mention uncontroversial research not requiring the destruction of human life as
an afterthought, if that? Indeed, why do some scientists assert that alternative
stem cell research offers but uncertain hope, while they promote embryo and
fetal tissue research as the keys to the Promised Land?
I suggest three answers: celebrities, abortion, and eugenics.
In a society that has often denigrated its true heroes, the only people who now
stand head above the clouds are figures from the world of entertainment.
Increasingly, these celebrities are using their power to promote public
policies. They know that their participation can define issues and shape the
debate by attracting media coverage, generating fan support, and, most
important, stimulating a Pavlovian response in politicians.
Three high-powered celebrities have weighed in recently in the stem cell
controversy, each promoting full federal funding of embryo research: the popular
Michael J. Fox, stricken at a tragically young age with Parkinson's disease; the
television icon Mary Tyler Moore, a diabetes patient; and actor Christopher
Reeve, paralyzed from the neck down in an equestrian accident. With such kiloton
star power favoring federal funding of embryo research, promoters of research
relying on adult stem cells and other alternative sources, along with those
opposed to the destruction of embryos on ethical grounds, have been reduced to
background noise or, worse, made to look heartless by denying these celebrities
medical breakthroughs they need.
At a deeper level, just as in the nineteenth century many national issues led
back to slavery, today numerous public policy disputes lead ultimately to
abortion. The controversy over destroying human embryos to obtain their stem
cells has brought an outcry from the pro-life movement, which views human life
as sacred from the moment of conception.
This has led to reflexive support for embryo research by many pro-choicers, who
have seized on the issue as a way to further their depiction of pro-life forces
as caring little about people once they are born. Thus the embryo stem cell
debate offers abortion rights advocates a "two-fer": It furthers their
primary political goal of isolating and marginalizing pro-lifers, and it enables
them to seize the PR high ground by "compassionately" pressing for
research that offers hope against
debilitating diseases. To acknowledge the tremendous potential of adult stem
cell research would interfere with this political pincer movement.Finally, in my
view, the ultimate purpose of promoting federal funding for embryo experiments
over adult stem cell research, particularly among many in the bioethics
movement, is to open the door to the eugenic manipulation of the human genome.
Once embryos can be exploited for their stem cells to promote human welfare,
what is to stop scientists from manipulating embryos to control and direct human
evolution, equally for the purpose of improving the human future?
Indeed, some of those who signed a recent open letter to President Bush urging
an end to the ban on federal funding for human embryo research were scientists
and bioethicists well known as favoring eugenics. For example, James D. Watson,
a co- discoverer of the DNA helix, has written that newborns should not be
considered "alive" for three days, to permit genetic screening.
Newborns who fail to pass genetic muster should be discarded, much as the
ancient Romans left unwanted babies outdoors to die of exposure.
Another co-author of this letter, Michael West, head of the for- profit research
company Advanced Cell Technology, proposes permitting human cloning as a way to
obtain genetically matched stem cells for transplants, which might overcome the
problem of tissue rejection in embryo stem cell therapy. Not coincidentally,
many neo-eugenicists in the bioethics and science communities view cloning as a
prime vehicle for directing the eugenic manipulation of human evolution.
All of this will come to a head in the coming weeks and months. Why go down the
ethically flawed and controversial path of fetal stem cells, when adult stem
cells and alternative sources offer such tremendous hope for treating every
malady that research using embryos and fetal tissue seeks to ameliorate?
Instead of turning this important field of medical research into another
battlefield in America's never-ending culture war (the first lawsuit has already
been filed to prevent federal funding), why not focus our public resources with
laser-like intensity on the incredible potential of adult and alternative
sources of stem cells?
Wesley J. Smith is the author of Culture of Death: The Assault on Medical
Ethics in America recently published by Encounter Books.