The House votes to ban therapeutic cloning
http://reason.com/rb/rb080101.html
August 1, 2001
Stem Cell Summer continues to bedevil
the American public and its elected representatives. On Tuesday, the U.S.
House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a bill that would outlaw
"therapeutic cloning."
The Human Prohibition Act of 2001
was introduced by Rep. David Weldon (R-Fla.). Therapeutic cloning
is a not-yet-realized medical procedure that would involve taking a regular
cell from a patient and installing its nucleus in an egg from which the
nucleus has been removed. The cloned cell would divide for a week in a
petri dish, to about 100 to 200 cells. Researchers would then take embryonic
stem cells from it and transform those cells into heart, liver, pancreatic,
or nerve cells that would be used to repair the patient’s damaged or diseased
organs. Since the cells are derived from the patient, they would
be perfect matches for her body and thus avoid the problem of immune rejection
that still plagues donated organ transplants today.
The Weldon bill would criminalize
research on therapeutic cloning, punishing scientists by jailing them for
up to 10 years and fining them up to $1 million. Furthermore, the
Weldon bill would also punish “Any person or entity, public or private,
[that] knowingly … import[s] for any purpose an embryo produced by human
cloning, or any product derived from such embryo.” (The House defeated
a competing bill that would have explicitly banned "reproductive cloning"
but would have allowed privately funded therapeutic cloning research to
continue.)
Supporters of the ban were keen to
separate their objections to using stem cells derived from therapeutic
cloning from the broader debate over stem cells derived from embryos left
over from in vitro fertilization efforts. “This bill does not stop
embryonic stem cell research, it stops research on cloned embryonic stem
cells,” declared Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.) during the floor debate.
Why exactly is the House of Representatives
so eager to ban therapeutic cloning? Rep. Christopher Smith (R-N.J.) summed
up the fears of many of those opposed to therapeutic cloning when he asked,
“What would stop someone from implanting one of those clones?” He added,
“The Weldon bill would end human cloning.”
Opponents such as Smith fear that
cloning embryos for stem cells would lead inevitably to an unscrupulous
scientist implanting of some of those embryos into a woman’s womb for the
purpose of creating a cloned human baby. Make no mistake: Reproductive
cloning that is trying to produce a cloned infant would be unethical at
this point in time. The results of animal cloning indicate that it is extremely
likely that such a cloned infant would suffer from severe birth defects.
Both those who voted to ban therapeutic cloning and those who did not insisted
that they were against reproductive cloning.
It may well be true that therapeutic
cloning research might make reproductive cloning easier, but should therapies
or technologies be banned because they could be abused? If potential for
abuse is the threshold, then Congress will be very busy banning such things
as automobiles, pain medicines, and tattoos. As Rep. Henry Waxman
(D-Calif.) pointed out, "All research can be misused."
Waxman also argued that the Weldon
bill contained two major drafting mistakes. First, the bill criminalizes
some forms of infertility treatments that are already being used to help
infertile couples have children of their own. Waxman was evidently
speaking of treatments where donor egg cytoplasm is infused into a woman’s
own eggs to overcome the problems created by defective mitochondria in
her eggs. This therapy, which necessarily involves the transfer of
a small amount of genetic material, has resulted in the births of more
than a dozen healthy kids so far. Second, and even more important, Waxman
pointed to the bill’s prohibition against importing “any product derived
from” cloned embryos which he believes could ban the importation of medicines,
proteins, enzymes, or other chemicals which cloning research in other countries
might discover, even if those medicines are not produced using cloned embryos.
Tuesday was a particularly bad day
for Michael West, head of Advanced Cell Technology, Inc. in Worcester,
Massachusetts. His company is at the forefront of research aimed
at one day using therapeutic cloning techniques to treat disease.
“This bill sets a terrible precedent by criminalizing a whole area of research,”
says West. “This is lynch-mob time.” He believes that opponents of embryonic
stem cell research are afraid that they are losing the debate over that
technology, so they have turned to banning this associated technology as
a way achieve a political victory. ”They are using this issue to
impugn all embryonic stem cell research,” West argues.
After the vote, Carl Feldbaum, president
of the Biotechnology Industry Organization issued a press release stating,
"Today's vote against the use of cloning technology for therapeutic research
is a step backwards, and if eventually enacted into law, will reverse progress
toward new medical treatments. Potentially millions of patients afflicted
with Alzheimer's, diabetes, Parkinson's, heart disease, and various cancers
will be affected.”
In other words, by passing this bill
the House of Representatives is not only throwing out cloned babies; it
is also jettisoning the research bathwater that might one day cure and
comfort millions of suffering patients.
Ronald Bailey (rbailey@reason.com)
is REASON's science correspondent and the editor of Earth Report 2000:
Revisiting the True State of the Planet (McGraw-Hill).
By Ronald Bailey