Although advances in in vitro fertilization (IVF)聽testing have improved outcomes for couples with infertility, these advances have spurred debate over 鈥渕osaic鈥 embryos鈥攅mbryos with both normal and abnormal cells. One such advanced method, preimplantation genetic screening (PGS), takes a biopsy of just a handful of cells from the outside of the embryo and then classifies them as normal or abnormal.
There is debate in the field of fertility over whether mosaic embryos should be implanted. 鈥淢osaic embryos are not abnormal embryos. Abnormal embryos don鈥檛 make babies or pregnancies,鈥 says James A. Grifo, MD, professor in the . 鈥淢osaic embryos have potential. They don鈥檛 have the same potential as a chromosomally normal embryo, but they can make babies,鈥 he tells CBS This Morning.
Dr. Grifo, who is also the director of 秘密研究所 Langone鈥檚 Fertility Center and , warns that mosaic embryos carry a higher risk of miscarriage, and more research is needed to better understand mosaicism.
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