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Girl could give birth to her sister
July 4, 2007
A seven-year-old girl could one day give birth to her
biological half-brother or half-sister after her mother became the first
woman to donate eggs to her infertile daughter.
Melanie Boivin, 35, from Montreal, has placed 21 of her eggs on ice for
Flavie Boivin to use when she grows up.
Flavie has Turner syndrome, a condition in which one of the two X
chromosomes normally carried by women is missing. It almost always causes
infertility, though women who have the condition can conceive with donated
eggs.
The mother-to-daughter donation is thought to be the first of its kind.
Although many infertile women have been given eggs by their sisters,
cousins, nieces and even daughters, biology has always prevented mothers
from helping their daughters so far. Even if an infertile woman were just 20
years younger than her mother, the donor would likely be in her forties and
have poor-quality eggs.
By freezing her eggs while she is still in her mid-thirties and fertile, Ms
Boivin hopes to give Flavie a good chance of having children. Were Flavie to
rely on an unrelated donor, she would probably have to wait for several
years as there is a shortage of donated eggs in most countries, including
Canada.
Ms Boivin said: “The role of a mother is essentially to help her children,
and if I could do anything in my power to help her I had to do it, and
because of my age I had to do it now.
“I told myself that if she had needed another organ like a kidney I would
volunteer without any hesitation and it is the same kind of thought process
for this.”
There is no law in Britain that would stop the mother of a girl such as
Flavie from freezing her eggs, but as they can be kept frozen for only ten
years it would not usually be practical. This limit, however, could be
revised by the time that a child was ready to use the eggs.
Seang Lin Tan, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at McGill University
in Montreal, who led the team that treated Ms Boivin, said that her doctors
had referred the case to an independent ethics committee before agreeing to
the procedure.
“We were very sensitive to the ethical issue, and had it been the daughter
donating to the mother there would have been the possibility of coercion,”
he told the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology conference
in Lyons. “But as it was the mother who was going to donate, it was just out
of love. It will be up to the daughter whether she uses the eggs in the
future.”
Another ethics committee would have to approve the use of the eggs should
Flavie wish to have them fertilised and implanted, Professor Tan said.
Ms Boivin and her partner, Martin Cote, 35, also have a son, Jeremie, 11,
and another daughter, Clara, 2. Clara does not have Turner syndrome.
Josephine Quintavalle, of the embryo rights group Comment on Reproductive
Ethics, said: “We have to stop thinking of women only in terms of their
reproductive potential.”
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