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In Vitro BOON TO CF PARENTS
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
BRUSSELS-
A collaborative effort by medical geneticists and
fertility specialists has allowed an infertile couple, both
carriers of the same cystic fibrosis gene mutation, to have a
healthy baby boy.
Congenital bilateral absence of the vas deferens is a common
cause of infertility which occurs more often in carriers of the
CF transmembrane conductance regulator gene than in the
population at large. The genital form of CF is a rare phenotype
of the disease associated with a specific CFTCR mutation, delta
F508. It is an unusual form of CF inasmuch as the patient may not
present with the typical respiratory manifestations.
Given the high rate of CF seen in association with the
congenital lack of vas deferens, the researchers screened both
parents for CF mutations to evaluate the risk of their having a
child with severe CF . Both were found to have the delta F508
mutation, but no other mutations.
In this case, both members of the infertile couple were
outwardly healthy. The medical team used a surgical technique
called microsurgical epididymal sperm aspiration to obtain sperm
from the testes of the patient. Next they performed an in vitro
procedure called intracytoplasmic sperm injection in oocytes
obtained from the future mother. This procedure tends to produce
better results than regular in vitro fertilization techniques
when sperm motility is impaired as is often the case in patients
with the congenital lack of vas deferens.
Next, the researchers used polymerase chain reaction to test
the two day old embryos for the delta F508 CF mutation prior to
implantation in the uterus. Analyses of single blastomeres
indicated that none were free of the mutant CF gene. However,
while two of the embryos were homozygous for the mutation, the
remaining three were delta F508 carriers. A single pregnancy was
then achieved following transfer of the carrier embryos.
Subsequent amniocentesis confirmed the delta F508 CF
mutation carrier status of the fetus. The final result, a healthy
six pound boy with intact vasa deferentia. This is the first
report of the combined use of microsurgical epididymal sperm
aspiration and intracytoplasmic sperm injection in conjunction
with preimplantation genetic analysis.
Questions remain regarding patients with this phenotype of
cystic fibrosis. It is possible that other rare CFTR gene
mutations may be present along with the rare delta F508 mutation.
Therefore, it is possible that the delta F508 carrier embryos in
this case could have been compound CF heterozygotes. The
combination of a delta F508 mutation from the mother and a rare
CF allele from the father could produce a more severe CF
phenotype than that of the parents.
The couple in this study underwent both extensive genetic
testing and counseling before and during the fertility
procedures. When tests showed that none of the embryos were
non-delta F508 carriers, they opted to take the risk of bearing a
child with CF, since the father was completely free of pulmonary
and pancreatic symptoms, and the couple had been unable to
conceive for ten years.
Subsequent testing was unable to find a second mutation in
the father's CF gene. Since the new born was free of the
congenital defect seen in the father and showed no other signs of
CF, the researchers believe he inherited the delta F506 gene from
his father and a normal CF gene from his mother.
For the complete details on this study see: Liu et al, JAMA,
12/21/94, v.272 , No. 23, pp. 1858-1860.
Transmitted: 94-12-27 21:33:26 EST
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