| Literature DB >> 35852518 |
Alex Polyakov1,2,3, David J Amor4,5, Julian Savulescu6,7,8, Christopher Gyngell8,9, Ektoras X Georgiou2, Vanessa Ross1,2,3, Yossi Mizrachi2, Genia Rozen1,2,3.
Abstract
Numerous chronic diseases have a substantial hereditary component. Recent advances in human genetics have allowed the extent of this to be quantified via genome-wide association studies, producing polygenic risk scores (PRS), which can then be applied to individuals to estimate their risk of developing a disease in question. This technology has recently been applied to embryo selection in the setting of IVF and preimplantation genetic testing, with limited data to support its utility. Furthermore, there are concerns that the inherent limitations of PRS makes it ill-suited for use as a screening test in this setting. There are also serious ethical and moral questions associated with this technology that are yet to be addressed. We conclude that further research and ethical reflection are required before embryo selection based on PRS is offered to patients outside of the research setting.Entities:
Keywords: assisted reproduction; embryo selection; ethics; polygenic risk score; preimplantation genetic screening
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35852518 PMCID: PMC9527452 DOI: 10.1093/humrep/deac159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Reprod ISSN: 0268-1161 Impact factor: 6.353
Polygenic risk score for embryo selection: an evaluation summary.
| Screening test evaluation components (ACCE*) | PRS-ES** issues identified | PRS-ES overall assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Analytic validity | Partially established ( | May be acceptable, but further research required to address remaining concerns. |
| Clinical validity |
Cannot be demonstrated owing to temporal disconnect between the test and outcomes. Changes in environmental conditions likely to make PRS-ES clinically invalid. | PRS-ES is unlikely to be clinically valid. |
| Clinical utility |
Overall improvement in clinical outcomes is impossible to demonstrate. Unlikely to be clinically significant owing to the limited number of embryos available for analysis and significant uncertainties inherent in PRS-ES. Clinical utility may be further decreased if the gender of an embryo is taken into account. | Clinical utility of PRS-ES is highly questionable, cannot be demonstrated by acceptable research protocols. |
| Ethical, legal and social implications |
Multiple ethical issues and social implications remain unresolved. Possible harms and questionable benefits, especially if IVF and embryo biopsy are undertaken for the sole purpose of PRS-ES. | Cannot be considered ethically justified. |
ACCE—analytic validity, clinical validity, clinical utility, ethical implications.
PRS-ES—polygenic risk score for embryo selection.