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Assisted Reproduction

In Light Of Another Fertility Scandal, HFEA About To Name & Shame

Yet another mistake at a UK fertility clinic has led the HFEA to announce plans to ‘name and shame’ clinics found to be in breach of guidelines. In the most recent incident:

A mistake at one of London’s top fertility clinics has resulted in more than 11 women being treated with genetically abnormal sperm, according to an exposé published in the Independent on Sunday newspaper this week. Embryos created from the sperm were more likely to misscarry or result in the birth of a child with a serious chromosomaldisorder.

The London Women’s Clinic (LWC), where the women were being treated, failed to carry out routine screening which would otherwise have detected the abnormal sperm. As a result, at least one of the women miscarried and she and her partner were subsequently left no choice other than to destroy all 22 of their frozen remaining embryos. The couple had spent a year and paid more than £15,000 being treated at the LWC, where 1,300 treatment cycles are carried out annually.

Had the LWC been following guidelines provided by the British Fertility Society (BFS), the abnormality would almost certainly have been detected and the donor rejected, according to Allan Pacey , secretary of the BFS. The LWC has accepted full responsibility for the error and is paying for the couple to have fertility treatment at another clinic abroad.

Clinics are required to make sure that certain processes, such as sperm screening, are witnessed by more than one member of staff to reduce the chance of mistakes being made. But an investigation carried out in January by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), which regulates the UK fertility sector, revealed that the LWC was failing to carry out these basic measures. By June the clinic was still using embryos created using sperm that had not undergone rigorous screening, according to an account published in the Independent on Sunday. After receiving reports of the incident, the HFEA ordered the clinic to stop using the sperm and to carry out a full and thorough audit of all other samples in use. The clinic subsequently adapted its operating procedures to include safety measures designed to prevent similar incidents from happening again.

Discussion

2 comments for “In Light Of Another Fertility Scandal, HFEA About To Name & Shame”

  • Interested with this quote

    Embryos created from the sperm were more likely to misscarry or result in the birth of a child with a serious chromosomaldisorder.

    I have several information about this topic

    Thanks, nice post anyway

    • Sally Brook

      This is just the latest in a long line of cock-ups that show the HFEA is not doing its job. It’s the fat cats of the HFEA who should be named and shamed

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