13 July, 2005  13:59 GMT
 'These are not true alternatives, only speculative ideas,' said one researcher of the proposed new methods for growing embryonic stem cells. Each idea faces significant scientific or ethical hurdles or both, he said.
The Senate heard details Tuesday of potential new ways to obtain embryonic stem cells without destroying embryos. Some scientists and others called the techniques unproven and an attempt to derail efforts at expanding federal funding into the research. The hearing came amid intense political maneuvering surrounding congressional
efforts to upend the Bush administration's policy on embryonic stem cells, which
restricts federal funding to 22 existing cell families, or lines, created before
Aug. 9, 2001.
A bill to expand financing to all available lines, including those created
after that date, passed in the House in May and awaits a vote in the Senate. If
it passes, President Bush has threatened a veto, which would be his first.
"There is a clear concern we are not moving far enough and fast enough to
support this research," said Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., who chaired the Labor,
Health and Human Services Subcommittee hearing. Specter mentioned his own battle
with cancer at the hearing's outset in calling for more stem cell research.
Specter is the sponsor of the Senate bill, along with subcommittee member
Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa. The hearing was held largely to head off opponents who
Specter says are embracing stem cell alternatives in an attempt to sap support
for his bill.
Alternative Approaches
Embryonic stem cells are the first few hundred cells found in an early
embryo. Because they can divide and grow into every type of tissue, researchers
have looked to them as a source of transplant tissue to someday treat spinal
injury and diseases such as diabetes and cancer. The lines are generally created
from early embryos donated for research by fertility clinic patients; the
embryos would otherwise be discarded.
However, because creating lines of these cells requires the destruction of
early embryos, opponents such as the United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops consider the research immoral.
At the hearing, scientists discussed four alternative approaches to creating
embryonic stem cell lines that in theory would evade moral objection:
- Use of dormant or "dead" early embryos that stop growing within the first
few days after their creation. In theory, their stem cells are still alive.
- Use of an individual cell plucked from an early embryo, keeping it intact,
and using it to grow a cell line. Called pre-implantation genetic diagnosis
(PGD), it is now used about 1,000 times a year nationwide to diagnose diseases
but hasn't generated human cell lines.
- Use of "altered" embryos, with genes scrambled to ensure that they could
never grow into human beings.
- Use of adult stem cells "reprogrammed" to act like embryonic cells.
All of the ideas were put forward in a report in May by the President's
Council on Bioethics, which detailed ethical and technical problems facing each
one. One council member, biologist William Hurlbut of Stanford, testified at the
hearing in favor of altered embryos. He called it a technological solution to
the embryonic stem cell research debate. "I think there is a moral dilemma," he
said.
'Only Speculative Ideas'
But others argued that the alternatives, even if worthy of research, did not
justify a holdup in expanding cell lines available for federal research grants.
"These are not true alternatives, only speculative ideas," said pediatrics
researcher George Daley of Children's Hospital in Boston. Each idea faces
significant scientific or ethical hurdles or both, he said.
"We need to move forward," said biologist Robert Lanza of Advanced Cell
Technology in Worcester, Mass. Lanza described progress in the PGD approach but
acknowledged that it could take a decade for it to generate human embryonic stem
cells.
Since the isolation of human embryonic stem cells in 1998 by University of
Wisconsin researchers, the topic has generated fierce debate and figured in last
year's presidential election. Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., a strong opponent of
the research, has attributed much of that ferocity to the abortion debate and
concern about the use of early embryos for research.
The National Institutes of Health spent $24.3 million last year on embryonic
stem cell research.

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