| Literature DB >> 32293411 |
Koko Kwisda1, Lucie White2, Dietmar Hübner2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The burgeoning field of biomedical research involving the mixture of human and animal materials has attracted significant ethical controversy. Due to the many dimensions of potential ethical conflict involved in this type of research, and the wide variety of research projects under discussion, it is difficult to obtain an overview of the ethical debate. This paper attempts to remedy this by providing a systematic review of ethical reasons in academic publications on human-animal chimera research.Entities:
Keywords: Chimera research; Ethics; Human-animal chimeras; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32293411 PMCID: PMC7092670 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-020-00465-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Fig. 1Flowchart documenting the retrieval of publications, the application of inclusion/exclusion criteria and further exclusions after full text screen
List of databases screened with respective search strings used
| Database | Search stringa |
|---|---|
| MEDLINE | ((((“Chimera”[Mesh])) OR (chimera))) AND ((((((“Ethics”[Mesh])) OR (ethics)) OR (ethical)) OR (bioethics)) OR (bioethical)) |
| Embase (Scopus) | Bioethic* OR ethic* AND chimer* (restricted to “Articles” and “Articles in Press”) |
| PhilPapers | (ethic* bioeth*) (chimer*) Fuzzy filter advanced |
| EthxWeb | Chimer+ AND (ethic+ OR bioethic+) restricted to journal articles |
| Updates via email update on various databases | As above |
aWords refer to controlled vocabulary of respective databases
Included and analyzed publications in alphabetical order
| [ | Abelman M, O’Rourke PP, Sonntag KC (2012) Part-human animal research: the imperative to move beyond a philosophical debate. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Ankeny RA (2003) No real categories, only chimeras and illusions: the interplay between morality and science in debates over embryonic chimeras. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Anton R (2016) On recent advances in human engineering Provocative trends in embryology, genetics, and regenerative medicine. Politics Life Sci |
| [ | Austriaco NP (2006) How to navigate boundaries: a reply to The American Journal of Bioethics. Natl Cathol Bioeth Q |
| [ | Badura-Lotter G, Fangerau H (2014) Human-animal chimeras: not only cell origin matters. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Bahadur G, Iqbal M, Malik S et al. (2008) Admixed human embryos and stem cells: legislative, ethical and scientific advances. Reprod Biomed Online |
| [ | Baylis F (2008) Animal eggs for stem cell research: a path not worth taking. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Baylis F, Fenton, A. (2007) Chimera research and stem cell therapies for human neurodegenerative disorders. Camb Q Healthc Ethics |
| [ | Baylis F, Robert JS (2007) Part-human chimeras: worrying the facts, probing the ethics. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Benham B, Haber M (2008) Moral confusion and developmental essentialism in part-human hybrid research. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Bok H (2003) What’s wrong with confusion? Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Bourret R, Martinez E, Vialla F et al. (2016) Human-animal chimeras: ethical issues about farming chimeric animals bearing human organs. Stem Cell Res Ther |
| [ | Cabrera Trujillo LY, Engel-Glatter S (2014) Human-Animal Chimera: A Neuro Driven Discussion? Comparison of Three Leading European Research Countries. Sci Eng Ethics |
| [ | Camporesi S, Boniolo G (2008) Fearing a non-existing Minotaur? The ethical challenges of research on cytoplasmic hybrid embryos. J Med Ethics |
| [ | Capps B (2017) Do Chimeras Have Minds? Camb Q Healthc Ethics |
| [ | Castle D (2003) Hopes against hopeful monsters. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Chan S (2014) Hidden anthropocentrism and the “benefit of the doubt”: problems with the “origins” approach to moral status. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Chapman A, Hiskes AL (2008) Unscrambling the eggs: cybrid research through an Embryonic Stem Cell Research Oversight Committee (ESCRO) lens. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Charland LC (2003) Are there answers? Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Cheshire WP, Jr. (2007) The moral musings of a murine chimera. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Cohen CB (2003) Creating human-nonhuman chimeras: of mice and men. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Cooley DR (2008) Genetically Engineering Human-Animal Chimeras and Lives Worth Living. Between The Species |
| [ | Coors ME (2006) Considering chimeras: the confluence of genetic engineering and ethics. Natl Cathol Bioeth Q |
| [ | de Melo-Martin I (2008) Chimeras and human dignity. Kennedy Inst Ethics J |
| [ | deGrazia D (2007) Human-animal chimeras: human dignity, moral status, and species prejudice. Metaphilosophy |
| [ | DiSilvestro R (2012) The two-essence problem that wasn’t. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Eberl JT (2007) Creating non-human persons: might it be worth the risk? Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Eberl JT (2012) Ontological kinds versus biological species. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Eberl JT, Ballard RA (2008) Exercising restraint in the creation of animal-human chimeras. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Eberl JT, Ballard RA (2009) Metaphysical and ethical perspectives on creating animal-human chimeras. J Med Philos |
| [ | Franklin S (2003) Drawing the line at not-fully-human: what we already know. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Gerrek ML (2008) Who really causes the lady to vanish? Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Greely HT (2003) Defining chimeras...and chimeric concerns. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Greely HT, Cho MK, Hogle LF et al. (2007) Thinking about the human neuron mouse. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Greene M, Schill K, Takahashi S et al. (2005) Ethics: Moral issues of human-non-human primate neural grafting. Science |
| [ | Haber MH, Benham B (2012) Reframing the ethical issues in part-human animal research: the unbearable ontology of inexorable moral confusion. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Heathcotte B, Robert JS (2006) The strange case of the humanzee patent quest. Natl Cathol Bioeth Q |
| [ | Hermeren G (2015) Ethical considerations in chimera research. Development |
| [ | Hyun I (2015) From naive pluripotency to chimeras: a new ethical challenge? Development |
| [ | Hyun I (2016) What’s Wrong with Human/Nonhuman Chimera Research? PLoS Biol |
| [ | Irvine R, Degeling C, Kerridge I (2012) Uncanny animals: thinking differently about ethics and the animal-human relationship. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Johnston J, Eliot C (2003) Chimeras and “human dignity”. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Jones DA (2010) Is the creation of admixed embryos “an offense against human dignity”? Hum Reprod Genet Ethics |
| [ | Jones DA (2012) The ethics of creating chimeras and other admixed organisms. Ethics and Medicine |
| [ | Karpowicz P (2003) In defense of stem cell chimeras: a response to “Crossing species boundaries”. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Karpowicz P, Cohen CB, van der Kooy D (2004) It is ethical to transplant human stem cells into nonhuman embryos. Nat Med |
| [ | Karpowicz P, Cohen CB, van der Kooy D (2005) Developing human-nonhuman chimeras in human stem cell research: ethical issues and boundaries. Kennedy Inst Ethics J |
| [ | Knoppers BMJ, Yann (2007) Our social genome? Trends Biotechnol |
| [ | Kobayashi NR (2003) A scientist crossing a boundary: a step into the bioethical issues surrounding stem cell research. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Lavieri RR (2007) The ethical mouse: be not like Icarus. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Levine S, Grabel L (2017) The contribution of human/non-human animal chimeras to stem cell research. Stem Cell Res |
| [ | Masaki H, Nakauchi H (2017) Interspecies chimeras for human stem cell research. Development |
| [ | McGee DB (2003) Moral ambiguity? Yes. Moral confusion? No. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Mirkes R (2006) Is it ethical to generate human-animal chimeras? Natl Cathol Bioeth Q |
| [ | Munsie M, Hyun I, Sugarman J (2017) Ethical issues in human organoid and gastruloid research. Development |
| [ | Murphy TF (2008) When is an objection to hybrid stem cell research a moral objection? Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Nelson JL (2008) Respecting boundaries, disparaging values. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Palacios-Gonzalez C (2015) Ethical aspects of creating human-nonhuman chimeras capable of human gamete production and human pregnancy. Monash Bioeth Rev. |
| [ | Palacios-Gonzalez C (2016) The ethics of killing human/great-ape chimeras for their organs: a reply to Shaw et al. Med Health Care Philos |
| [ | Palacios-Gonzalez C (2017) Chimeras intended for human gamete production: an ethical alternative? Reprod Biomed Online |
| [ | Palacios-González C (2015) Human dignity and the creation of human–nonhuman chimeras. Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy |
| [ | Piotrowska M (2012) Who are my parents? Why assigning moral categories to genealogical relations leads to more confusion. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Pusch AF (2015) Splices: When Science Catches Up with Science Fiction. NanoEthics |
| [ | Ravelingien A, Braeckman, J., Legge, M. (2006) On the moral status of humanized chimeras and the concept of human dignity. Between the Species |
| [ | Robert JS (2006) The science and ethics of making part-human animals in stem cell biology. Faseb j |
| [ | Robert JS, Baylis F (2003) Crossing species boundaries. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Robert JS, Baylis F (2003) A response to commentators on “Crossing species boundaries”. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Robertson JA (2003) A response to “Crossing species boundaries” by Jason Scott Robert and Francoise Baylis. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Rollin BE (2007) Of mice and men. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Rollin BE (2007) On chimeras. Zygon |
| [ | Sagoff M (2003) Transgenic chimeras. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Sagoff M (2007) Further thoughts about the human neuron mouse. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Salter B, Harvey A (2014) Creating problems in the governance of science: Bioethics and human/animal chimeras. Science and Public Policy |
| [ | Saniotis A (2013) Remaking homo: Ethical issues on future human enhancement. Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics |
| [ | Savulescu J (2003) Human-animal transgenesis and chimeras might be an expression of our humanity. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Savulescu J, Skene L (2008) The kingdom of genes: why genes from animals and plants will make better humans. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Schaub DJ (2006) Chimeras: from poetry to science. Natl Cathol Bioeth Q |
| [ | Seyfer TL (2006) An overview of chimeras and hybrids. Natl Cathol Bioeth Q |
| [ | Shaw D, Dondorp W, de Wert G (2014) Using non-human primates to benefit humans: research and organ transplantation. Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy |
| [ | Shaw D, Dondorp W, Geijsen N et al. (2014) Creating human organs in chimaera pigs: an ethical source of immunocompatible organs? J Med Ethics |
| [ | Siegel AW (2003) The moral insignificance of crossing species boundaries. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Streiffer R (2003) In defense of the moral relevance of species boundaries. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Streiffer R (2005) At the edge of humanity: human stem cells, chimeras, and moral status. Kennedy Inst Ethics J |
| [ | Streiffer R (2010) Chimeras, moral status, and public policy: implications of the abortion debate for public policy on human/nonhuman chimera research. J Law Med Ethics |
| [ | Thompson PB (2003) Crossing species boundaries is even more controversial than you think. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Urie KA, Stanley A, Friedman JD (2003) The humane imperative: a moral opportunity. Am J Bioeth |
| [ | Watt H (2007) Embryos and pseudoembryos: parthenotes, reprogrammed oocytes and headless clones Journal of Medical Ethics |
| [ | Zwanziger LL (2003) Crossing perspectival chasms about species. Am J Bioeth |
Journal disciplines for all included publications
| Journal Disciplines | |
|---|---|
| Bioethics | 46 (52.3%) |
| Science/Medicine | 14 (15.9%) |
| Medical Ethics | 8 (9.1%) |
| Theology | 7 (7.9%) |
| Ethics General | 5 (5.7%) |
| Ethics of Science/Technology | 3 (3.4%) |
| Philosophy of Medicine | 2 (2.3%) |
| Philosophy General | 1 (1.1%) |
| Law | 1 (1.1%) |
| Politics and Life Sciences | 1 (1.1%) |
Mentions, rejections and endorsements of positive reasons (Category P)
| Positive Reasons (Category P) | |
|---|---|
| P.1: The creation of chimeras may advance basic research | |
| P.2: The creation of chimeras may produce benefits for humans | |
| P.2.i: New therapies might be developed on the basis of chimera research | |
| P.2.ii: Chimeras might serve as sources of transplantable organs and tissues | |
| P.2.iii: Chimera research might open ways to human enhancement | |
| P.3: The creation of chimeras may prevent direct harm to humans or animalsa | |
| P.4: The creation of chimeras may have other benefitsb | |
a E.g. by helping to replace human subjects or laboratory animals in biomedical research
b E.g. by fostering the preservation of endangered species, or by allowing animal enhancement
Mentions, rejections and endorsements of reasons concerning chimera creation (Category A)
| Reasons Concerning Chimera Creation (Category A) | |
|---|---|
| A.1: Animals might be mistreated | |
| A.1.i: General animal welfare may be infringed | |
| A.1.ii: Special protection of higher animals such as primates may be infringed | |
| A.2: Human beings/human material might be mistreated/misused | |
| A.2.i: Human embryo protection may be neglected | |
| A.2.ii: Undue forms of human egg donation may occur | |
| A.2.iii: Other human biological material may be used improperly | |
Mentions, rejections and endorsements of reasons concerning chimera treatment (Category B)
| Reasons Concerning Chimera Treatment (Category B) | |
|---|---|
| B.1: The chimera might be violated in its animal-analogous moral status | |
| B.1.i: Chimera’s mere existence might be inconsistent with animal welfare and/or animal non-instrumentalization | |
| B.1.ii: Chimera’s further treatment might be inconsistent with animal welfare and/or animal non-instrumentalization | |
| B.2: The chimera might be violated in its human-analogous moral status | |
| B.2.i: Chimera’s mere production might violate human-analogous respect | |
| B.2.ii: Chimera’s mere existence might be incompatible with human-analogous welfare | |
| B.2.iii: Chimera’s developmental options might not allow for its relevant potentiala | |
| B.2.iv: Chimera’s early treatment might violate human-analogous embryo protection | |
| B.2.v: Chimera’s later treatment might be incompatible with human-analogous rightsb | |
| B.2.vii: Chimera might be attributed a questionable role in societyc | |
| B.2.viii Chimera might have unclear moral status | |
| B.2.ix Chimera might have human-like capacities/characteristicsd | |
a E.g. when a potential for rational behavior is confined to a bodily structure that will not support its development
b E.g. when the chimera is experimented on without adequate consent or killed for research purposes
c E.g. when the chimera is abused as an inferior member of a slave race
d Insinuating that this possibility in itself constitutes an ethical problem
Mentions, rejections and endorsements of reasons concerning chimera existence (Category C)
| Reasons Concerning Chimera Existence (Category C) | |
|---|---|
| C.1: Crossing human-animal species boundaries could have detrimental metaphysical effects | |
| C.1.i: Existence of chimeras may threaten human dignity | |
| C.1.ii: Existence of chimeras may blur species identities | |
| C.1.iii: Existence of chimeras may violate moral taboosa | |
| C.1.iv: Existence of chimeras may evoke instinctive repugnanceb | |
| C.1.v: Creation of chimeras may be unnatural | |
| C.2: Crossing human-animal species boundaries could have detrimental social effects | |
| C.2.i: Existence of chimeras may lead to moral confusionc | |
| C.2.ii: Existence of chimeras may have slippery slope effectsd | |
| C.2.iii: Creation of chimeras may undermine public support for scientific research | |
| C.2.iv: Creation of chimeras may result in cross-species pregnancies | |
a Suggesting that these taboos demarcate essential moral borders
b Suggesting that this repugnance hints to some relevant moral aberration
c Supposing that the existence of chimeras leads to an erosion of important moral differences in the respective treatment of humans and animals
d Supposing that the existence of chimeras, once permitted, makes it impossible to argue consistently against clear moral malpractices
Mentions, rejections and endorsements of reasons concerning downstream effects (Category D)
| Reasons Concerning Downstream Effects (Category D) | |
|---|---|
| D.1: Individual medical safety might be infringed | |
| D.2: Third party interests might be infringed | |
| D.2.i: Findings and substances may threaten general biosafetya | |
| D.2.ii: Funding chimera research may contradict distributive justiceb | |
a Particularly by spreading new diseases
b Particularly by affording more financial resources than would be warranted on objective grounds