Egg sharing is a procedure in which a woman who is herself undergoing assisted-conception treatment receives subsidized treatment in exchange for sharing her eggs with another woman. It has become increasingly prevalent in the UK and is the major source of donor eggs in the UK; however, its practice is controversial. Available evidence concerning the outcomes of egg sharing is limited. To date, while this has failed to provide strong empirical support for concerns that have been raised regarding egg sharing, continuing significant gaps in information regarding clinical and psycho-social outcomes remain, which mean that an informed judgment on empirical grounds cannot yet be made. Ongoing key ethical controversies focus on the impact of egg sharing on the commodification of human gametes and whether women can genuinely consent to donating their eggs under an egg-sharing scheme.
KEYWORDS: commodification of gametes • decision making • donors • egg donation • egg sharing • informed consentTechnological developments in reproductive healthcare have increased the options available to people seeking to overcome fertility impairments -including treatments using gametes provided by a third party. In practice, although some jurisdictions prohibit donor remuneration, payment to 'donors' is common. Such payment necessarily confounds the accepted definition of 'donor'. In accordance with common usage in the assisted reproductive technologies (ART) literature, we have employed the terms 'donor' and 'donation' in this paper, but the reader should be aware of this caveat. While insemination of donor sperm has been used as a medicalized procedure for well over a century [1], IVF using donor eggs is a much more recent phenomenon; the first birth from such a procedure was reported in Australia in 1984, using an egg provided by an IVF patient [2]. It is quite possible, although the authors do not provide details of the arrangements under which the donation took place, therefore, that the very first reported birth through egg donation was in fact the result of egg sharing. Use of donor eggs is clinically indicated for women seeking to conceive who have experienced primary or secondary ovarian failure, who have functioning ovaries but for whom standard ovarian stimulation drug regimes have failed or where there is a risk of transmitting a serious genetic disorder to a child [3].Use of donor eggs has become especially prevalent in ART procedures for older women (i.e., women aged over 40 years), for two inter-related reasons; first, because of the significant decline in female fertility once women reach their mid30s [4] and the more rapid decline after the age of 40 years [101], and second, because the likelihood of successful embryo implantation is related to the age of the woman providing the egg rather than to the age of the woman in whom the embryo is implanted [5]. US data show that while fewer than 3% of all women undergoing an ART procedure during 2005 used donor eggs, 22% of women aged 41-42 years, 55% of women aged over 42 yea...