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- 1.5
- Steptoe's initial pioneering work was with laparoscopy, a
- method for examining the abdomen. This led, in 1968, to his
- collaboration with Robert Edwards on infertility problems.
- Their work culminated in the first successful birth of a baby
- from in vitro fertilisation (IVF). Edwards showed how
- immature eggs could be ripened and then fertilised in a dish
- by adding sperm. Steptoe's laparoscopy enabled eggs to be
- collected from the ovary. The fertilised eggs seemed to
- develop into normal embryos. But they found support for
- their work hard to come by. There was resistance to work on
- human embryos, and they were conscious of the ethical
- problems. When they tried to replace the artificially
- fertilised embryos in the mothers, they had only one success
- between 1971 and 1975 and that was an ectopic pregnancy.
- They then tried freezing eggs and embryos and modifying
- the hormonal treatment of the mothers. Embryos were
- replaced in mothers during their natural menstrual cycle.
- Lesley Brown became pregnant with this procedure. The
- birth of Louise Brown, the first "test-tube baby", in 1978 was
- Steptoe's moment of glory. With Edwards, Steptoe established
- a private clinic at Bourn Hall and, a few weeks before his
- death, the 1000th baby conceived in vitro was born there.
- Their techniques are now used worldwide
- @
- 2.3
- The new method of fertilization being pioneered at Oldham
- General Hospital is another example of doctors' ingenuity in
- helping childless women to become pregnant.
-
- The method was first outlined last year in the report of an
- experiment in which human eggs were fertilized outside the
- body.
-
- The basis of the method is to remove an egg from an ovary,
- fertilize it outside the body with the husband's sperm, and
- replace it in the womb. If the method proves viable it will
- help to treat the form of infertility in which the Fallopian
- tubes are blocked. This is the commonest single cause of
- infertility in women.
-
- The method has been made possible by two advances
- reported in Nature last year by R.G. Edwards and B.D.
- Bavister, of the Physiological Laboratory at Cambridge
- University, and P.C. Steptoe, of Oldham General Hospital.
-
- One advance is the clinical technique for removing the egg
- cells from the ovary by manipulations made through three
- small slits in the abdomen wall. This is an operation in which
- Mr. Steptoe, senior consultant in obstetrics and gynaecology
- at Oldham, is a leading expert.
-
- The second advance is the technique for fertilizing human
- eggs outside the body. This was done some years ago for
- other mammals such as the hamster but it has taken until
- now to devise a reliable way of fertilizing human eggs. The
- trick is to find a mixture of chemicals that mimics the natural
- body environment in which the sperm and egg cells mature
- and become ready for fertilization.
-
- The fertilized egg is replaced in the womb and there follows
- the natural course of events, the first of which is
- implantation in the wall of the uterus.
-
- One of the possible hazards of the technique is that the test-
- tube fertilization may not go exactly according to the rules
- and an abnormal embryo may be created. This is a natural
- hazard but many of the many abnormal embryos that arise
- naturally are screened out by some correcting mechanism.
-
- The various animal experiments that have been conducted do
- not really give any guide to the chances of an abnormal
- embryo being created by the test-tube technique. But these
- must inevitably be slightly higher than with the normal
- method.
-
- The Oldham doctors have undoubtedly taken this possibility
- into account and an obvious safety measure available to
- them is to withdraw a few foetal cells during the third month
- of pregnancy and test that the chromosomes are normal.
-
- The fertility treatment at Oldham is unlikely to be successful
- at the first attempt. Several operations may be necessary for
- the fertilized embryo to have a good chance of implantation
- in the womb. Not only must the egg be implanted at the
- right stage in the menstrual cycle-and judging the right stage
- is a matter of guess-work-but it will be subject, like any
- other egg, to natural waste.
-
- One estimate is that between a half and a third of all
- fertilized eggs fail to implant in the uterus and many of those
- that do so prove to be abnormal embryos that are quickly
- weeded out.
-
- In the Oldham operation it is planned to super-ovulate the
- infertile patients with a dose of gonadotrophin hormones.
- This will allow several eggs to be retrieved.
-
- If the technique proves successful it will not only afford
- treatment for the commonest kind of infertility but should
- allow artificial insemination between couples where the
- woman, not the man, is the infertile partner. An egg
- supplied by an anonymous donor could be fertilized by the
- husband's sperm and implanted in his wife's uterus.
-
- All the Oldham technique consists of is fertilizing human eggs
- in a test tube instead of in the Fallopian tubes. After that
- they are reinserted in the uterus to implant in the usual way.
-
- The technique has very little to do with what is commonly
- meant by the "test-tube baby". This term implies an embryo
- that has grown to full term outside the body. This will
- remain a remote possibility until progress is made in growing
- a placenta as well as the embryo outside the body.
-
- Moreover, growing a test-tube baby, should that prove
- possible, is a different proposition from grown numerous
- replicas of the same individual out of his body cells.
-
- Several American doctors are working on infertility and birth
- difficulties. One of the leading researchers is Dr. Warren
- Zapol at the National Institute of Health in Bethesda,
- Maryland.
-
- He is, as he puts it, working "from the other end". His
- experiments are aimed at removing partially-formed
- foetuses from women who have managed to conceive but
- who are unlikely to be able to give birth.
-
- The foetuses are then mechanically incubated, using artificial
- placentas. So far, in experiments with sheep, the foetuses
- have all died after a few days because of infection.
-
- Dr. Zapol said that the best thing about Dr. Steptoe's
- experiment was that it made use of the mother's placenta.
- "It's probably a lot more soundly based than the difficult
- stuff we are doing here," he said. It was far better to make
- use of the mother's placenta.
-
- Among the views on the experiment last night were:- The
- Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists said that
- although there had been no official discussion they were
- confident that it rested at the moment in the hands of ethical,
- professional people who would be motivated to reflect the
- human situation. It was a development for the relief of a
- particular kind of problem in an infertile couple.
-
- The main concern was that it gave an opportunity for
- scientists to do something outside the fundamental attitude
- of reproduction in the relationship between a married couple.
- It was emphasized that there would have to be some sort of
- safeguard at some stage if it looked as if the experiment
- might pass out of the hands of those dealing with the whole
- problem.
-
- On the possibility of an abnormal baby resulting-put by one
- of the doctors concerned as extremely small-it was thought
- that the development was so new that it was impossible to
- say. An infertile couple deeply concerned with the
- possibility of having a child of their own, would obviously
- accept risks greater than those acceptable to a normal couple.
-
- Dr. Derek Stevenson, secretary of the British Medical
- Association, said that like organ transplantation the
- announcement carried with it difficult ethical problems that
- called for careful thought by doctors and others. The public
- would need reassurance on a number of points. The
- association would be examining the implications for society
- as a long-term measure.
-
- The Church of England Information Office said the
- development would need careful assessment on moral, social
- and legal grounds. Because it might be technically possible it
- did not mean necessarily that it should be done. Such
- matters were usually considered by the church's board for
- social responsibility, and a group from the board might be
- asked to consider the matter and make recommendations.
-
- Father John McDonald, formerly Professor of Moral Theology
- at St. Edmund's Roman Catholic College, Ware, Hertfordshire,
- said the marriage contract did not give marriage partners the
- right to children, but the right to natural sexual intercourse
- from which children might result. Pope Pius XII had stated
- the principle that the marital act, by nature's design,
- consisted of a personal cooperation which the husband and
- wife exchanged as a right. Artificial insemination lacked the
- personal, natural element that should be there. Another
- point on which Catholics would have further objections was
- the way in which the husband's semen was obtained.
-
- The Methodist Church said that, provided there were
- adequate medical safeguards and that fresh developments
- took place within the framework of marriage, it was hard to
- find moral objections to what was being planned.
-
- Dr. Douglas Bevis, of Sheffield Jessop hospital, who with his
- colleague Dr. Earle Wilson has been doing "test-tube" baby
- research for 18 months, said the publicity would give false
- hope to thousands of childless couples.
-
- It was wrong to claim that the medical profession was ready
- to produce "test-tube" babies at will because of major
- difficulties yet to be overcome.
-
- A great obstacle to be surmounted was the way to prepare
- the mother's womb artificially to receive the fertilized egg.
-
- Mr. St. John-Stevas, Conservative M.P. for Chelmsford, who
- raised in the House the question of "test-tube" babies when
- news of the possibility was made public a year ago, and who
- opposed the Abortion Bill, said he thought the proposed
- operation would be legitimate in cases where the woman's
- own egg was used, fertilized by her husband's sperm and
- where it was impossible for her to have a baby without the
- operation. This was equivalent to artificial insemination by
- the husband.
- @
- 2.4
- A Lancashire woman, aged 34, has agreed to attempt a new
- method for overcoming infertility. On the B.B.C. television
- programme Horizon last night, she was seen interviewed by
- the consultant gynaecologist who proposed the treatment.
-
- The procedure would involve taking an egg from her ovary
- by a simple operation. This would be fertilized in a dish in
- the laboratory by sperm, from her husband. After a period
- not yet determined the fertilized embryo would be
- transplanted back into the woman's uterus to grow into a
- baby.
-
- Treatment for infertility was needed because of an
- obstruction of the fallopian tubes which normally should
- convey an ovum for fertilization to the uterus. In a test last
- November the specialist removed an egg from the woman's
- ovary and successfully fertilized it in a test tube.
-
- The doctor concerned made it clear in a B.B.C. radio interview
- last night that there was more work to be done before a
- transplantation could be attempted. But he said he had
- about 30 patients who were prepared to try this method of
- overcoming infertility.
-
- The work hinges on research first reported from Cambridge
- last February where a team completed the first experiment
- in fertilizing a human egg in a test tube. Previous work had
- been done with other animals. It took 10 years between the
- first fertilizing the egg of a rabbit in a test tube and the first
- human experiment.
-
- The difficulty has been in producing conditions in a test tube
- containing biological fluid that are identical to the conditions
- in the reproductive organs of a woman.
-
- The specialist said that possible risks in producing an
- abnormal baby by this procedure had to be determined
- before going ahead. However, he thought it would be
- completed within the year and he was very optimistic about
- the outcome.
-
- Although not mentioned by name, the method referred to in
- the programme hinges on work reported in Nature last year.
- It is being carried out at Cambridge by Dr. R. G. Edwards, Dr.
- B. D. Bavister and Dr. P. C. Steptoe. Dr. Steptoe is a senior
- consultant in gynaecology and obstetrics at Oldham hospital.
-
- During the radio programme, Dr. Kit Pedlar head of a
- scientific research unit at London University, spoke of the
- dangers of "mass-produced people" and "biological
- engineering".
-
- If this technique were freely available, "then you have a
- means...of mass-producing people without the advent of a
- mother at all. If you extend this experiment a little bit, it is a
- question of biological engineering. A general might order
- 100,000 troops to be produced. This can only be stopped by
- the public making some sort of objection."
-
- Dr. Steptoe said he did not have any moral qualms but "we
- do need help from public opinion".
- @
- 2.5
- MAN'S CONTROL of his own patterns of reproduction moved
- a step nearer last week when Mr Patrick Steptoe revealed
- plans, in collaboration with Dr Robert Edwards of Cambridge,
- to implant a test-tube fertilsed embryo in the womb of a
- Lancashire housewife.
-
- When he was still developing techniques for fertilising
- female eggs in the laboratory, Dr Edwards would often return
- to his Cambridge research unit in the dead of night, scale the
- high wall and return to his work bench just to see if his
- treasured cultures were still alive. His conscientiousness has
- been more than a useful asset during his almost continuous
- fight to get financial backing for his work and academic
- recognition from his colleagues.
-
- During the early 1960s he was forced to relinquish his post
- with the Medical Research Council, Mill Hill, because money
- for his line of research began to dry up. His fortunes
- changed by 1965 when he joined the physiological laboratory
- at Cambridge University with a Ford Foundation grant. His
- first goal-fertilisation of female eggs in the test tube-though
- simple in concept proved infinitely complex to achieve.
-
- Vital clues to Edwards' dilemma came from the American
- reproductive physiologist, Dr M. C. Chang, one of the co-
- discoverers of the pill, who successfully fertilised hamster
- eggs and later rabbits and pigs. But Edwards' programme
- was inhibited by one drawback; he could not obtain a steady
- supply of female eggs. As he explained in an interview a
- year ago, "When I asked various gynaecologists if they could
- let us have excised ovaries and explained what we wanted to
- do they thought I was barmy. Their eyes glazed over-you
- know the sort of reaction."
-
- His problem was solved when he made contact with Mr
- Patrick Steptoe, senior consultant in obstetrics and
- gynaecology, at Oldham. Ovaries or pieces of ovaries
- removed during essential medical operations at Steptoe's unit
- were regularly rushed from Oldham to Edwards's laboratory
- in Downing Street, Cambridge. In their recent statements
- neither of the collaborators have stated whether women are
- informed that their removed ovaries are used in research.
-
- Steptoe's work aroused bitterness among sections of the
- scientific community. Dr J. F. Watkins of Oxford wrote to the
- Times. "The programme should provide an awful warning to
- scientists who are tempted, for whatever reason, to come into
- the market-place of public relations men, mass media,
- fashion photographers and pop stars, with the result that
- they are exhibited as curiosities in a rare-show."
-
- Dr Watkins argument reflects a fairly common scientific
- view. Scientists should be allowed to get on in private with
- their limited experiments and they should only become
- public when the new techniques can be successfully put into
- practice. Dr Edwards himself has taken the view that
- "doctors should not be asked or expected to answer all the
- issues that arise from their work-that's up to society."
-
- This is a view which is increasingly under scrutiny. Society
- has to live with the results of science, however applied: no
- atomic physicist needs telling that. The fertilisation of a
- human egg outside the body and its successful implantation
- in the womb is more than just a treatment for certain kinds
- of infertility. From it will-within the decade-follow a whole
- series of developments which raise awkward ethical and
- practical problems.
-
- When, for example, it becomes possible to fertilise a human
- egg in the test tube and to implant it successfully in the
- womb of the woman from which it came, it will be almost as
- easy to implant it in the womb of a different woman-to have
- a baby by proxy.
-
- This, too, can be regarded as a boon to women suffering from
- certain kinds of infertility, for they might be able to find a
- friend or relation willing to bear a child for them. But how
- would the proxy mother feel about parting with a baby
- which every biological instinct would tell her was her own?
- If she wanted to keep it would the genetic mother have any
- legal rights? Once the idea of babies by proxy became
- acceptable for medical reasons how long would it be before
- the rich started to pay others to have their children for them,
- in order to continue their careers, preserve their looks, or
- simply because they found pregnancy a bore? Would this be
- a useful service or would it be as degrading as prostitution?
-
- Probably it will soon be possible to examine a test-tube
- embryo before implantation for abnormalities in the
- chromosomes of the kind that lead to mongolism or to
- individuals of ambiguous sex. Again, at first sight this looks
- like an unmixed blessing. Who would not avail themselves of
- the opportunity of ensuring that their child did not suffer
- from one of these conditions if they could? But how would it
- affect attitudes to the abnormal children that would continue
- to be born anyway? Could it lead to their being regarded not
- as unfortunate biological accidents but as administrative
- errors, for which someone was to blame?
-
- It is already possible to remove a rabbit embryo soon after
- fertilisation, determine its sex, and replace it. It will not be
- long before the same thing becomes possible with human
- embryos. The sexing procedure often damages the embryo,
- so one suggestion for applying it to humans is to make the
- embryo divide into two-into incipient twins-and sacrifice one
- to determine the sex of the other. That too would then be
- discarded if it was not of the right sex. The embryos would
- be only microscopic bundles of cells, but how many people
- would regard the whole procedure as morally repugnant?
-
- There are compelling medical reasons for the sex
- determination of children in some cases. It might be used,
- for example, virtually to eliminate certain hereditary
- diseases like haemophilia. But once it was available for
- medical reasons it would be difficult to resist pressure to
- make it generally available. A recent survey in the United
- States indicated that if parents were free to chose the sex of
- their children in advance the ratio would be 55 boys to 45
- girls. No government would be likely to allow this, for there
- would be a danger of upsetting the sex balance of the whole
- population.
-
- These developments are disturbing enough, let alone the
- more instant prospect of embryos nurtured outside the body
- from conception to "decanting" as Aldous Huxley called it
- (animal embryos have already been grown in the test tube to
- the stage where their hearts begin to beat), or the production
- of exact genetic copies of individuals (already possible with
- frogs). The options are open. Which ones do we want to take
- up?
-
- Like abortion, birth control clinics for the unmarried,
- euthanasia, it is a subject inextricably bound up with people's
- moral attitudes which ought to be argued out in public. The
- danger of looking at each new development in a limited
- medical context is that the necessary debate will never take
- place. Step by apparently beneficial step we may arrive in a
- place where we do not really want to be.
-
- This is why it is disturbing that if the B B C Horizon
- programme had not learned of the experiments, the first
- babies conceived in the test tube would probably have been
- born without anyone apart from those directly concerned
- being any the wiser. This shows how little communication
- there is between those engaged on this kind of research and
- the rest of the community and how easy it is for people to be
- presented with faits accompli.
-
- Of course there is no medico-scientific conspiracy afoot. It is
- normal scientific practice to keep quiet about experiments in
- progress, and scientists who speculate about the future and
- the social implications of their work invite sneers and
- disapproval from the rest of the scientific community.
-
- But Dr Edwards may care to ponder as he grows his human
- embryos that opposite his laboratory is the Cavendish where
- Rutherford, in 1934, said that the splitting the atom would
- have no practical applications.
- @
- 3.1
- The world's first test-tube baby, a girl, was born by caesarian
- section just before midnight at Oldham and District General
- Hospital, Greater Manchester. She weighed 5lb 12oz.
-
- Mr Patrick Steptoe, the consultant gynaecologist who has
- pioneered test-tube baby research and who is in charge of
- the case, said: "All examinations showed that the baby is
- quite normal. The mother's condition after delivery was also
- excellent."
-
- The mother, Mrs Lesley Brown, aged 29, from Bristol, was
- "enjoying a well earned sleep".
-
- The embryo was implanted in Mrs Brown's womb after being
- fertilized in Mr Steptoe's laboratories last November. He
- used sperm from her husband, a railway van driver, aged 38,
- who has a son from a previous marriage.
-
- By that technique Mr Steptoe was able to by-pass Mrs
- Brown's blocked fallopian tubes.
-
- The child's financial future was assured after newspaper
- rights to articles and photographs were sold by Dutch auction
- to Associated Newspapers, publishers of the Daily Mail and
- London Evening News. They are believed to have paid more
- than £300,000.
-
- More than 5,000 couples have sought help for infertility
- since the work of Mr Steptoe and Dr Robert Edwards, his
- partner, was first reported.
- @
- 3.2
- The personalities of Mr Patrick Steptoe and Dr Robert
- Edwards, the consultant gynaecologist and the Cambridge
- research physiologist involved in the test-tube birth at
- Oldham on Tuesday night, are indicated in the way they
- perfected the method of in vitro fertilization (conception
- outside the body) against all enormous odds. In all
- probability most other people would have found them
- insurmountable.
-
- Their fields of study do not figure on the Medical Research
- Council's and the Department of Health and Social Security's
- priority list for the allocation of their overstretched
- resources.
-
- In fact, Dr Edwards was obliged to leave the Medical
- Research Council's laboratories at Mill Hill in the early 1960s
- because no money was available to continue his line of
- research. He was able to return to Cambridge as a research
- fellow in 1965 with a grant from the Ford Foundation.
-
- While he was starting his studies into the fertilization of
- female eggs in the laboratory, Mr Steptoe was developing
- some brilliant surgical techniques for helping infertile
- patients. But again it was a matter of stretching meagre
- resources.
-
- The two men differ markedly. Mr Steptoe is the more
- flamboyant. Dr Edwards attempts to shun publicity, yet he
- has a sensitivity to public interest in his work, which seems
- to have come partly from his experience as a local councillor.
-
- Mr Steptoe has been a popular lecturer to young doctors on
- the benefits of treating infertility, and Dr Edwards has
- spoken many times at scientific conferences on the
- implications of research in reproductive biology, implications
- that give rise to many anxieties.
-
- He also made an important contribution to the book, Our
- Future Inheritance: Chance or Choice, prepared by the British
- Association for the Advancement of Science.
-
- The book is one of the best guides published on the scientific,
- social, ethical and legal implications of recent advances in
- genetics and biology. Its chapter on artificial insemination
- explains clearly for the layman the procedures adopted by
- Mr Steptoe and Dr Edwards at an early stage of their work.
-
- They met through the British Fertility Society, of which Mr
- Steptoe is president. Their cooperation began when Dr
- Edwards wanted to extend work on fertilization of mice and
- hamster eggs in vitro to human ova.
-
- Research in the United States, particularly that opened by Dr
- M. C. Chang, an eminent reproductive physiologist, and one of
- the co-discoverers of the contraceptive pill, who had also
- successfully fertilized several different animals, indicated a
- line of attack.
-
- But the work at Cambridge was limited because Dr Edwards
- could not obtain a steady supply of human ova. Hence the
- mutual interest of the clinician and scientist. The eggs were
- supplied from ovaries removed during essential operations at
- Oldham. They were taken to the laboratory in Downing
- College, Cambridge, implanted in rabbits as carriers.
-
- Before collaborating with Mr Steptoe 10 years ago Dr
- Edwards had sought the help of other gynaecologists. He said
- some years ago: "When I asked various gynaecologists if they
- could let us have ovaries and explained what we wanted to
- do they thought I was barmy."
-
- An indication of the dedication of Dr Edwards to his research
- is revealed in an account of the late 1960s at Cambridge.
- While he was still developing techniques for fertilizing eggs,
- which showed an immense sensitivity to alterations in the
- temperature of the incubators and to the composition of the
- nutrients of the fluid in which they bathed, Dr Edwards
- would return to his research unit at Cambridge in the small
- hours, scaling a high wall to get to his bench to see if his
- valuable cultures were thriving.
-
- Mr Steptoe emphasizes the relief of personal distress of the
- women who can be treated for infertility. Dr Edwards
- extends that by explaining the role that the technique can
- play in sex determination of children in specific cases.
-
- There are about 20,000 women in Britain with the sort of
- blockage that might be circumvented by the new treatment.
- What neither man can say is how the procedure can be
- guaranteed to be used only for such patients, and not as
- another step toward Aldous Huxley's Brave New World.
- Government film made of delivery of The birth of the
- Browns' test-tube baby was recorded on film by the
- Government's Central Office of Information. It intends to sell
- the film for use on television.
-
- The Government said yesterday that the film was made as a
- record of an historic medical event and to assist in the
- evaluation of the baby's behaviour at birth. It was made
- with the agreement of the parents, Mr Steptoe and the
- hospital authorities, and the Central Office of Information
- expects it to be a "best seller".
-
- There was apparently some dispute over the film with
- Associated Newspapers, which had bought the syndication
- rights to the story of the birth. The Department of Health
- and Social Security said last night: "Ministers have decided
- that they cannot accept the agreement with Associated
- Newspapers made last night in so far as it relates to
- restrictions on the release of the film made by the Central
- Office of Information.
-
- Sir John Dewhurst, President of the Royal College of
- Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, said the birth carried hope
- for certain childless women, but he doubted whether the
- technique would ever be easy.
-
- Dr Anne MacLaren, director of the Medical Research Council's
- mammalian development unit, said there was no evidence
- that children born by the technique would run a risk of
- greater deformity than children born normally.
-
- Our Medical Correspondent writes: The birth of this baby is
- the culmination of more than ten years' research by Mr
- Steptoe and Dr Edwards; but while it offers some hope to
- infertile couples the technique is unlikely to be used widely.
- It does, however, open up the prospect of surrogate
- motherhood in which a "foster-mother" could take over the
- burden of pregnancy.
-
- A test-tube baby differs from a normal conception in that the
- fertilization of the ovum by the sperm takes place in a
- laboratory instead of inside the mother. Once fertilization
- has occurred and the ovum begins the process of cell division
- it is returned to the mother's body and grows inside the
- uterus.
-
- This method benefits only some infertile couples. Though
- one marriage in every 10 is involuntarily childless, the cause
- is as likely to be in the man as in the woman.
-
- The technique developed by Mr Steptoe and Dr Edwards
- provides an alternative for women in whom surgery has
- failed. The woman is given a short course of treatment with
- hormones to cause several ova to mature at the same time.
- A laparascope, a narrow tube like a telescope, is then passed
- into her abdomen and the ova are removed. They are mixed
- with spermatozoa from the man in a culture fluid.
-
- One ovum or more is likely to be fertilized, and after a few
- days it will have become a small ball of dividing cells, a
- blastocyst. This very early embryo can then be placed inside
- the uterus so that implantation can occur.
-
- The procedure sounds simple but in practice there have been
- repeated failures. Human ova were cultured successfully as
- long ago as 1965, but since then progress has been slow.
- Either the ova have stopped dividing after a few hours, or
- they have failed to "take" when replaced in the uterus. Two
- years ago Mr Steptoe reported a successful pregnancy, but
- the blastocyst became implanted in the lower end of the tube
- instead of the uterus and the pregnancy miscarried.
-
- A similar technique of laboratory fertilization has been used
- in veterinary medicine for many years.
-
- But veterinary experience also shows that the fertilized
- ovum need not be returned to the female from which it was
- taken; it can be implanted with equal chances of success in
- another. In theory, therefore, the Steptoe-Edwards
- technique could be used to take ova from one woman and to
- return the fertilized cell to someone else. Doctors' hope is to
- reverse sterilization The successful birth of the test-tube
- baby girl in Oldham and District General Hospital on Tuesday
- night has created a new dimension in the whole medical
- approach to fertility.
-
- Dr Robert Edwards, the Cambridge scientist who collaborated
- with Mr Patrick Steptoe, the Oldham gynaecologist, in work
- that resulted in the birth to Mrs Lesley Brown, of Bristol,
- disclosed yesterday that both men envisaged developing
- their techniques with aims including the reversal of
- sterilization.
-
- Dr Edwards told a press conference at Prestwich Hospital,
- Greater Manchester: "This work may be developed in other
- respects. It may include the reversal of sterilization. I do
- not know if there is a chance of reversal, but it is certainly in
- the forefront of our minds."
-
- Earlier, Mr Steptoe said that their work may be applied to
- other fertility matters, for instance to men who produce too
- few spermatozoa.
-
- The birth of the Browns' daughter, Mr Steptoe said, was
- completed by Ceasarian section because the mother was
- suffering from toxaemia, a condition that could cause still-
- birth. The baby was perfectly all right, he said, adding: "It
- came out crying its head off. It is a beautiful baby."
-
- The two specialists said that after the egg removed from Mrs
- Brown had been fertilized it was kept in an incubator for two
- and half to three days before reimplantation.
-
- Our Religious Affairs Correspondent writes: None of the main
- churches has any official policy on in vitro fertilization, but
- there was a general welcome yesterday from church
- spokesmen for the first successful test-tube birth. Only the
- Roman Catholic Church appeared to be in two minds.
-
- Cardinal Gordon Gray, Archbishop of St Andrews and
- Edinburgh, said: "I have grave misgivings about the methods
- and the possible implications and consequences for the
- future. However, it would be rash of me to be categorical
- about the morality of a new technology."
-
- Mgr Augustine Harris, auxiliary to the Roman Catholic
- Archbishop of Liverpool and president of the English and
- Welsh Bishops' social welfare commission, said: "A pro-life
- expression of love is to be commended and supported." In
- this case, he added, "science can support the loving and
- natural ambition of the couple to produce new life".
-
- Mgr Harris's welcome was typical of comment in other
- churches.
-
- Mr Giles Ecclestone, secretary of the Board for Social
- Responsibility of the General Synod of the Church of England,
- said: "As an advance in meeting the problem of childlessness,
- facing some married couples, I welcome the development in
- the techniques which have now resulted in the birth of a
- baby. It is the latest of many steps by which man has taken
- responsibility for shaping the conditions of his life."
-
- He added, however, that the community faced the matter of
- priorities in using scarce health resources, particularly in
- view of the pressing needs of the very old or the mentally
- handicapped.
-
- "In a world setting it may well appear as simply another
- example of the unjust distribution of resources between rich
- and poor countries", he said.
- @
- 3.3
- Research on human embryos should not be made a criminal
- offence and should be permitted beyond the fourteenth day
- of development, the test-tube baby pioneers, Dr Robert
- Edwards and Mr Patrick Steptoe, said yesterday.
-
- Outlawing such research, as recommended in the Warnock
- report on in vitro fertilization, is "a clumsy and inflexible
- instrument of control", according to the ethical committee at
- the Bourn Hall Clinic in Cambridgeshire, where Dr Edwards
- and Mr Steptoe are directors.
-
- However, the two men support most of the Warnock
- recommendations. They also agree substantially with the
- views of the clinic's ethical committee, which has submitted
- its views on Warnock to Mr Norman Fowler, Secretary of
- State for Social Services.
-
- Dr Edwards and Mr Steptoe said that they were worried that
- making some types of embryo research illegal would inhibit
- development of techniques and treatments of benefit to
- mothers and children.
-
- In one potentially controversial area, they suggested that
- human embryos might be placed briefly within such animals
- as sheep or rabbits in order to learn more about their
- development. But they insisted that they had no intention of
- performing such work.
-
- The two men, who delivered the world's first test-tube baby,
- Louise Brown, in 1978, said that they resisted the argument
- that all human embryos were entitled to protection.
-
- "There are some embryos whose only potential is to form a
- cancer that will threaten the life of the mother".
-
- Mr Steptoe said: "Such embryos can form the most malignant
- tissue that ever occurs in the human species."
-
- They also opposed the recommended 14-day limit on embryo
- research. "To produce a criminal law which makes research
- legal and worthwhile at a minute to midnight, and illegal at a
- minute past is clearly wrong", Dr Edwards said.
-
- Mr Steptoe added that a 14-day limit was arbitrary, as some
- embryos developed more slowly than others.
-
- The clinic's ethical committee said: "The requirement under
- the law to dispose of all embryos in vitro punctually at the
- end of day 14 seems to be impractical and self-defeating."
-
- In the committee's view, shared by Mr Steptoe and Dr
- Edwards, it would be preferable to place the legal limit at, or
- close to the point at which the neural development of the
- foetus might make it sentient, that is, between day 18 and
- day 30.
-
- Dr Edwards said: "Our whole emphasis is to give the husband
- and wife their own child - their own normal child. Science is
- being attacked unfairly, because science is neutral."
-
- More than 300 babies have been born as a result of
- treatment of patients at Bourn Hall.
- @
- 3.4
- Mr Patrick Steptoe, CBE, FRS, the obstetrician and
- gynaecologist who, together with the biologist Dr Robert
- Edwards, pioneered the first in vitro ('test-tube') fertilization
- procedure, died on March 21. He was 74.
-
- His work aroused much controversy among those concerned
- with ethics. What is undeniable, however, is that it also
- brought children and immeasurable joy to many whose lives
- would otherwise have remained barren.
-
- Steptoe and Edwards saw their many years of painstaking
- and often tedious labours bear fruit on July 25, 1978, with
- the birth of Louise Brown, the world's first 'test-tube' baby.
- Steptoe himself delivered the child by Caesarean section.
-
- Patrick Christopher Steptoe was born on June 9, 1913, in the
- small Oxfordshire town of Witney, one of eight children. He
- was educated at the local grammar school, and in 1939
- qualified from St George's Hospital Medical School.
-
- He immediately joined the RNVR as a surgeon-lieutenant and
- served throughout the war, being captured by the Italians in
- 1941 and released in 1943 after the downfall of Mussolini.
- From then until 1946 he was seconded to the Admiralty.
-
- Following demobilization, he returned to St George's to study
- obstetrics, and in 1949 was appointed to a senior post in the
- discipline at the Oldham group of hospitals. It was there that
- he became interested in ovarian disorders and learnt how to
- carry out laparoscopy, greatly helped by a visit in Paris to Dr
- Raoul Palmer, who had developed the technique.
-
- Steptoe brought an instrument back to Oldham and the town
- soon became an important centre for laparoscopic training.
- The investigation enables the viewer to inspect the
- abdominal cavity through a small incision at the umbilicus.
- The laparoscope is then introduced, the cavity inflated with
- an insert gas, and hairline optical fibres are threaded through
- the instrument to illuminate the contents of the ovary and
- the pelvis generally.
-
- In the 1960s, paradoxically, the chief used was to assess the
- suppression of ovulation after contraceptive therapy and to
- control the dose of fertility drugs used to bring about
- ovulation. Steptoe wrote a book on laparoscopy in 1967, and
- it is of interest that in it there is no mention of removing
- eggs for in vitro fertilization.
-
- A year later came the turning point when Steptoe met
- Edwards at a meeting of the British Fertility Society at the
- Royal Society of Medicine in London. They formed an almost
- instant mutual trust. There and then they decided to embark
- upon joint research which led ten years later to the
- achievement at Oldham which reverberated throughout the
- world.
-
- A centre for human reproduction was set up at Oldham and
- Steptoe provided the eggs, which were collected by Edwards
- and his assistant, Jean Purdy, who travelled to Oldham by
- road from Cambridge - and who covered over a quarter-of-a-
- million miles on these missions.
-
- It was an emotional time, their hopes and fears being shared
- by many infertile women who, supported by their husbands,
- had volunteered to participate in this vital research.
-
- In vitro fertilization was not achieved without many
- problems. The advance was painfully slow, often by trial and
- error, and it eventually emerged that it was important to
- implant the fertilized eggs by night.
-
- Though fertilization by a husband's sperm was easy, after
- three or four days when the developing embryos were ready
- for implanting, it was found that these microscopic babies
- did not survive, a spontaneous abortion being the usual
- sequence.
-
- Using a computer, Steptoe and Edwards solved the problem
- by finding that the pattern of steroids circulating in a
- woman's body during her monthly reproductive cycle was a
- finely-attuned body mechanism and that the technique of
- super-ovulation (which they had been using) to obtain eggs
- was too coarse a method. Instead, they discovered, using a
- Japanese urine hormone test, that it was possible to gauge
- the time of natural ovulation, and this was the basis of the
- new series of attempts beginning in November, 1977.
-
- The following year, an eight-cell embryo was implanted into
- the uterus of a patient from Bristol, and at the end of nine
- months a perfect baby (Louise Brown) was produced. Here
- at last was success on the technical side; but Steptoe and
- Edwards ran straight into moral and ethical problems which
- they had foreseen as early as 1968, for it was then that they
- first asked for ethical guidance on their work.
-
- These ethical considerations were hotly debated during the
- discussion of Enoch Powell's Bill in 1984. At this time it was
- pointed out that, if the Bill went through, an infertile couple
- would have to obtain political consent to procreate, for the
- Bill required that all embryos fertilized in vitro should be
- replaced. Yet this was medically unacceptable, because some
- embryos are abnormal and may even be cancerous.
-
- Steptoe had always been concerned with the relief of
- personal distress, and through his death the nation has lost a
- great benefactor to infertile women.
-
- He chaired the British Fertility Society at its inception in
- 1973, and in 1983 founded the Centre for the Study of
- Human Reproduction at Bourn Hall, near Cambridge, so that
- he could continue his work after his retirement from the
- National Health Service.
-
- Despite his final illness Patrick Steptoe continued to see
- patients. He was yesterday due to have been presented with
- his CBE by the Queen at Buckingham Palace, and later this
- year he was due also to have received the British Medical
- Association's gold medal.
-
- His wife, Sheena, whom he married in 1943, survives him
- with their son and daughter.
-
-
-