Can you choose your babys gender
The miracle of conception can be quite well organised,
thanks to an increase in knowledge since our parents' generation.
We can attempt to organise birth dates and times, but what
influence can parents have over gender? Richard Fisher explains the
practical and ethical minefield surrounding gender selection.
The ability humans have to reproduce is often as
much a product of chance as of planning. The desire to plan
conception has led to an increased knowledge about the best times
in the menstrual cycle for intercourse to occur. Like all human
endeavours, however, we often seek to influence not just the
absolutes such as conception, and for many people, trying to
influence the gender of their potential baby becomes an important
goal as well. Despite the fact that giving advice to enable someone
to do this, or to perform a procedure that would ensure it, is
illegal in New Zealand, it remains a common query from patients
attending reproductive medicine clinics.
The 2004 Human Assisted Reproductive
Technologies Act states that "it is illegal for reproductive
purposes to select an in vitro embryo on the basis of sex or to
perform any procedure, or provide, prescribe or administer anything
in order to increase the probability, that a human embryo will be
of a particular sex".
There is a defence to a charge under this
section, however, and that is that if the gender selection is
performed to prevent or treat a genetic disorder or disease. There
are some genetic diseases which occur only in males and
consequently this may be a rational approach to limiting the
likelihood of the presence of this disease in a particular family,
although in time, as technology improves, the particular mutation
will more commonly be able to be assessed and the rather blunt
instrument of gender won't be needed.
Ethical viewpoints and standards vary
between communities so it is probably no surprise that this
prohibition of gender selection is not universal. Although the
United Kingdom and most of the rest of Europe prohibit gender
selection, it is an acceptable use of technology in countries such
as the United States, Russia, Thailand and a number of other Asian
countries. Israel allows the use of gender selection for family
balancing where couples may already have a number of children
of a particular gender and wish for a further child of a
different gender. Clearly there is no single ethical answer to the
issue and New Zealand has fallen back on a legal one.
The arguments for and against gender
selection have become more polarised since our ability to attain
the goal has improved. It seems that our community (through its
representatives in Parliament) is tolerant of attempts to choose a
child of one gender or the other when the likelihood is not
certain. 
There has been no objection to
couples attempting to influence the
gender of their child in many ways for centuries. It is an
interesting philosophical point as to when any particular community
might decide to move to proscribe gender selection in the continuum
of random chance to 100% certainty. The basic underlying ethical
issue, to seek to alter the gender, has not changed. Only our
ability to do so with accuracy has.
The penalty for breaking the Law in New
Zealand is imprisonment of up to one year or a fine not exceeding
$100,000, or both. The Law is carefully written as "no person may"
rather than "no doctor or clinic", so one might presume that even
passing on information in the form of a book might place one at
risk.
The history of attempts at gender
selection is long. The ancient Greeks apparently advised that men
who wanted a boy should lie on their right side. In 18th century
France, it was suggested that men tied off their left testis, as
this was thought to be the source of female-bearing sperm, if one
wished to create a baby boy. More recently, American folk history
suggested that for men to have a son they should wear their work
boots to bed; also that they should get drunk before intercourse,
or that they should take an axe to bed. Hanging one's pants on the
right bedpost was also thought to alter the gender balance to boys.
I'm not sure whether each of these things were to be done
separately or together but either way, they all sound unlikely to
be tolerated by a modern woman.
Advice to women seeking a son was that
they should eat red meat, they too should lie on their right side
(the ancient Greeks might have found this complicated), or
alternatively pinch their husband's right testis. Although all the
above suggestions can be dismissed as having no scientific basis,
nor evidence of success, it did not stop a surge of activity in the
quest for natural gender selection late in the 20th century.
There exists a Chinese gender chart,
touted to have been found in a tomb 700 years ago and now available
for a small fee, which purports to give you up to a 90% chance of
conceiving the desired gender based on the days of the month and
the status of the moon, but sadly once again there is no evidence
at all that this is effective.
The best known name in natural gender
selection methods is Landrum Shettles, a scientist turned doctor
who published a book How to Choose the Sex of Your Baby in
the 1970s. This book sold well over a million copies and was
bedtime reading for thousands of couples. Shettles turned some
plausible biology about the size, longevity, and speed of X- and
Y-bearing sperm into practical advice about how to change the
gender balance.
Shettles noticed that male sperm were
smaller, moved faster, and were less long-lived than X-bearing
sperm, which were also larger and slower. He believed that by
having intercourse at the time of ovulation, the male sperm would
get to the egg quicker and that fertilisation with a Y-bearing
sperm was more likely to occur.
He dressed up the basic concept with
further pseudo-science, which included that women should have an
orgasm at the same time as their partner as this increased the
amount of alkaline secretion present, supposedly also favourable to
the Y-chromosome. He thought that if you could deliver the sperm
closer to the egg then that would also enhance the conception of a
male child and so advised deep penetration at intercourse as
well.
Shettles' book continues to sell
internationally. Whether this is in the misguided belief that the
theory is true, or whether it adds interest to an otherwise
recreational pursuit, one cannot tell - but there have now been
numerous studies which have refuted this theory.
Among those is a study carried out at
National Women's Hospital by my colleague Dr Freddie Graham and his
colleague Dr John France. Their data clearly refuted Shettles, and
in their study, most conceptions that occurred early turned out to
be boys.
A woman reading this paper further went
on to interpret that the pregnancies that appeared to occur after
ovulation were girls, and so grew another internet group, which
went under the name of "O+12" (ovulation plus 12 hours). Once again
there is no statistical significance in this information, and the
original paper and the perceived outcome became yet another myth
about gender selection.
It is of interest that a natural family
planning study, of which New Zealand was a participant in the late
1990s, showed that almost no conceptions occurred when intercourse
took place after ovulation and that all these previous studies are
limited in their statistical significance by the difficulty in
accurately determining when ovulation occurred. Shettles went on to
be part of a major ethical scandal in the United States regarding
early research around IVF without ethical consent and with little
scientific rigour.
A Dr Ericisson described a technique for
separating X and Y bearing sperm by centrifuging sperm through
various gradients to enrich concentrations of each. A number of
clinics sprung up worldwide which exploited his initial claims to
success until such time as a number of other authors failed to
confirm his findings. It is quite clear that this technique alters
only fractionally the gender balance.
More recently, a more scientific and now
patented technique of sperm separation has been developed in the
United States. It is marketed under the name of Microsort. Sperm is
passed through a cell sorting system after having been labelled
with a luminescent dye, which then separates it into
X-enriched and Y-enriched pools using a laser beam that
recognises volume differences.
The technique is still being evaluated in
a research protocol but current results after inseminating this
enriched sperm show that it is about 90% successful for girls and
75% for boys. This technique requires normal sperm concentrations
and is both complex and expensive. It is, of course, possible that
success rates for both genders will improve in time as the
technology improves, although it is unlikely to be
100%.
Gender selection using the technique of
preimplantation genetics in combination with IVF has made it
possible to be almost certain of the embryo's gender. This means
that in people with sex-linked disorders, only embryos of the
desired gender can be replaced and future disability avoided. It
also means, however, that the social use of this technology has
become available in some countries.
The process of IVF, of course, requires
the injection of drugs, development of more eggs than usual,
the physical collection of these eggs and fertilisation in the
laboratory. It is possible to use microsorted sperm to increase
the number of embryos of the desired gender but the step
beyond this occurs when a single cell is removed from the embryo on
the third day of development (when there are about eight cells
present) and this cell is tested to determine the gender. This can
be done with minimal effect on the embryo. Embryos of the desired
sex are then replaced inside the uterus.
Like all IVF, this is not a risk-free
process, and neither is it a guarantee of conception, although if
conception occurs, the gender is almost certain. IVF success
rates vary from around 50% in younger women to less than 10% in
women 43 or older.
The decision to do IVF for social reasons
surely requires a couple to have not only robust emotional
resources but also a fervent desire to have a child of one gender
or the other, given its cost. The use of IVF for such a purpose is
hotly debated.
Along with the enthusiasm for Shettles
and Ericsson came a number of theories about diet and dietary
supplements. Stolkowski proferred the view that a diet high in
potassium and sodium would more likely lead to having a boy,
whereas supplements with calcium and magnesium would help the
conception of girl. No clinical evidence is available to support
this.
Douching with a lemon (I suspect in
diluted form) was said to increase the likelihood of having a
girl because of the change towards acidity in the vaginal
secretions, and a number of books then followed looking at dietary
supplements.
Some of the authors became wealthy; most
of the couples were disappointed. The great advantage of gender as
an outcome is that every suggestion has at least a 50% chance of
being right and if you charge enough, even offering a money
back guarantee if you are wrong is likely to lead to financial
success.
There are some biological factors that
are thought to increase the incidence of one gender over the other.
The best example is in post war Holland where after the starvation
and deprivation in the Second World War, there was a significant
increase in males born in the immediate post war period.
Whether this is evolutionary adaptation
or one associated with underlying nutrition directly is currently
not possible to discern. With increasing knowledge about the effect
of nutrition in the time around conception, it may be that some
rational scientific data will become available which will alter
gender balance.
Sex ratio - that is, the number of live
males divided by the total number of births in a given period of
time - is variable under many conditions. There remains a poor
understanding of factors that alter this ratio, but there is
evidence that external influences can be associated with such
change.
Older mothers and fathers having IVF have
been shown to produce more girls than boys. Currently there is no
explanation available for this. In Holland in the 1980s there were
more daughters born to men who worked with pesticides.
Anaesthetists of both genders appeared to have more girls. There is
certainly lots yet to be gleaned as to the causation of these
changes.
Most people are uncomfortable about the
primary use of gender selection for social reasons. Many of us can
think of couples for whom having a child of a particular gender at
a particular time of their reproductive career would have been
nice. Whether "it would have been nice" is a good enough
justification to embrace the technology is an international debate
that will continue long into the future.
Richard Fisher FRCOG, FRANZCOG, CREI together with Freddy
Graham established Fertility Associates
(www.fertilityassociates.co.nz) in 1987 after previously starting
up New Zealand's integrated infertility medicine group at National
Women's. He is New Zealand's foremost medical spokesperson on
matters of reproductive health and has been an advocate for better
access to care for couples with infertility throughout his career.
He has four children and is married to Leigh, without whom he could
never have practiced medicine with the enthusiasm and commitment
that he has.
As seen in OHbaby!
magazine Issue 10: 2010
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