RESUMO
The purpose of this review is to synthesize the current knowledge on the international movement of patients and biopsied embryo cells for pre-implantation genetic diagnosis and its different applications. Thus far, few attempts have been made to identify the specific nature of this phenomenon called 'cross-border reprogenetic services'. There is scattered evidence, both empirical and speculative, suggesting that these services raise major issues in terms of service provision, risks for patients and the children-to-come, the legal liabilities of physicians, as well as social justice. To compile this evidence, this review uses the narrative overview protocol combined with thematic analysis. Five major themes have emerged from the literature at the conjunction of cross-border treatments and reprogenetics: 'scope', 'scale', 'motivations', 'concerns', and 'governance'. Similar themes have already been observed in the case of other medical tourism activities, but this review highlights their singularity with reprogenetic services. It emphasizes the diagnostic and autologous feature of reprogenetics, the constant risk of misdiagnosis, the restriction on certain tests for medically controversial conditions, and the uncertain accessibility of genetic counseling in cross-border settings.
Assuntos
Biópsia/métodos , Embrião de Mamíferos , Internacionalidade/legislação & jurisprudência , Diagnóstico Pré-Implantação/métodos , Técnicas de Reprodução Assistida , Viagem/tendências , Humanos , Viagem/legislação & jurisprudênciaRESUMO
The concomitance of a migratory wave and the hospital crisis once again raises the question of the care that the French healthcare system is able to provide to migrants. On the occasion of SFFEM's 19th annual day, we present a synthesis of the research work that has been communicated at that time. Firstly, we will discuss how doctors have been able to overcome strangeness to revive the notion of hospitality according to Levinas; secondly, we will discuss how the hospital is departing from its mission of institutional hospitality because of administrative injunctions; thirdly, we will discuss how ethnomedicine gives us keys to open up to other cultural norms; fourthly, we will see the inadequacy that exists between rights of access to medical care and their effectiveness; finally, the conclusion of Xavier Emmanuelli, founder of the social ambulance service, will remind us how much the values of the French Republic call us to the notion of care and openness to otherness.
RESUMO
A series fo prodrug modifications of 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) containing dinitrobenzoate ester moieties with varying chain length has been prepared. These compounds were shown to be cytotoxic in several cell culture screens and also exhibited significant activity against L1210 lymphoid leukemia in vivo. The possibility exists that the transport and distribution of these compounds in vivo will be determined, in part, by increased lipophilic character, with a consequent selective localization in lymphatic and CNS tissue.