Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Eric Dane’s Friends Launch 0K GoFundMe to Support ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Star’s Daughters After His Death

Eric Dane’s Friends Launch $250K GoFundMe to Support ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Star’s Daughters After His Death

February 21, 2026
Lakers’ win over Clippers is mixed bag when it comes  to takeaways

Lakers’ win over Clippers is mixed bag when it comes to takeaways

February 21, 2026
Former New Haven Police Chief Karl Jacobson charged with embezzling ,000

Former New Haven Police Chief Karl Jacobson charged with embezzling $85,000

February 21, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Eric Dane’s Friends Launch $250K GoFundMe to Support ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Star’s Daughters After His Death
  • Lakers’ win over Clippers is mixed bag when it comes to takeaways
  • Former New Haven Police Chief Karl Jacobson charged with embezzling $85,000
  • Miss J. Alexander’s Friends Organize GoFundMe After Stroke and ‘America’s Next Top Model’ Documentary
  • Juan Soto, Nolan McLean’s epic 10-pitch Mets battle even featured Rock Paper Scissors
  • Trump tariff refunds: Will consumers see any of the $175 billion collected after the Supreme Court ruling?
  • ICE arrests illegal immigrants convicted of violent, sexual crimes
  • Minnesota Man Killed Neighbor, Kidnapped Pregnant Girlfriend and Her 4 Kids in Terrifying Rampage
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » New tech allows parents to ‘score’ IVF embryos for desirable traits — and it’s in desperate need of regulation
New tech allows parents to ‘score’ IVF embryos for desirable traits — and it’s in desperate need of regulation
Science

New tech allows parents to ‘score’ IVF embryos for desirable traits — and it’s in desperate need of regulation

News RoomBy News RoomFebruary 20, 20263 ViewsNo Comments

“If I give you a diagnostic tool that lets you end up with a kid that has a three times higher chance of getting admitted to MIT, I think people are going to be interested.”

Although it sounds like a line from a sci-fi movie, this is actually a quote from Steve Hsu, a physics professor at Michigan State University and co-founder of Genomic Prediction, a company that offers parents a new technology called polygenic embryo selection.

In the 1997 film “Gattaca,” the kind of thinking reflected in Hsu’s pitch led to a dystopia in which children were conceived in laboratories and society was divided into genetic haves and have-nots. When the film first came out, the reproductive technologies it depicted were science fiction — but today, they are rapidly becoming scientific realities.


You may like

Companies like Genomic Prediction, Orchid, Herasight, and Nucleus now offer polygenic embryo selection, a technology that sorts embryos by their genetics and predicts the eventual traits of babies-to-be. It is not the same as an older technology that screens embryos for chromosomal abnormalities and specific, single-gene genetic diseases, such as sickle cell and cystic fibrosis. By comparison, polygenic embryo selection aims to give prospective parents insight into a much wider range of traits, ranging from intelligence to heart disease to depression.

Hsu thinks this is just good business, and he’s right –– in survey studies, many prospective parents have expressed interest in utilizing the technology. The question is whether we should let him sell it.

These tests rely on polygenic scores, summaries of thousands of tiny genetic influences, to try and predict the likelihood that a given trait will manifest. Polygenic scores are valuable tools for researchers seeking to better understand the influence of genetics on various diseases. But the predictive accuracy of existing polygenic scores varies substantially from trait to trait, and they are typically unreliable guides for predicting a person’s future — let alone an embryo’s.

Researchers have discovered that many of the supposedly genetic effects summarized in existing polygenic scores aren’t biological at all. Rather, they reflect the fact that people who are genetically alike tend to also live in similar regions and share social and economic circumstances. Polygenic scores also don’t work well for people who aren’t represented in the training data — namely, people who aren’t of European ancestry.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

But that isn’t stopping companies from marketing their service as the responsible way to make babies.

Potential consequences of polygenic embryo selection

Despite their well-known scientific limitations, using polygenic scores to select embryos could fuel the belief that children conceived this way are inherently “better” than those conceived without them — akin to what we saw in “Gattaca.”

Parents may have higher expectations of polygenic embryo-selected kids. Polygenic embryo-selected individuals might seek out potential spouses who have similarly been selected for. Meanwhile, those born without selection could face lower expectations, discrimination and the stigma of being deemed genetically inferior.


You may like

The ways in which we perceive one another, however unfounded, have a profound influence on our social interactions. There is, for instance, a long and disturbing history of using genetic science to legitimize harmful and inaccurate views of race and instigate racial violence.

Eventually, polygenic embryo selection will likely become more accurate at predicting traits as the genomic databases used in medical research grow larger and more diverse — though just how accurate will depend on the trait. That makes the current lack of regulation around the technology all the more troubling.

There are no agreed-upon standards for the threshold at which the underlying science will be accurate enough to justify its use in embryo selection. Little compels companies to be transparent about the specific scientific studies that their services are built upon. Misleading advertising faces few repercussions in practice. There’s a reason the leading embryo selection companies are based in the United States: We don’t have rules.

Meanwhile, other developed nations have taken a far more cautious regulatory approach. Countries like the U.K., Germany and France have banned polygenic embryo selection outright –– although loopholes still exist. These nations recognized early that leaving such consequential technology to market forces risks creating the exact dystopia “Gattaca” warned us about.

Prospective parents who suffer from conditions such as Crohn’s disease or schizophrenia may see embryo selection as a way to reduce their child’s chances of enduring a similar fate. It’s difficult to justify avoiding embryo selection in these cases. But without a robust regulatory apparatus, screening for such conditions could inadvertently open the door to selection for far more troubling traits: intelligence, athleticism, or even skin tone.

At least two companies — Nucleus and Herasight — already offer embryo testing for intelligence.

Notably, as it stands, the technology is unaffordable to most Americans. Polygenic embryo selection requires undergoing IVF. A single IVF cycle costs tens of thousands of dollars and is not covered by Medicaid. Genetically testing each embryo prior to implantation adds thousands more to the overall price tag.

Given the wealthy can access the technology, as the effectiveness of polygenic embryo selection improves, existing social inequalities between rich and poor Americans could turn into biological ones.

Affluent Americans are already into the idea of utilizing embryo selection to “optimize” their best baby. Millions of dollars have been pumped into the industry from tech elites like Alexis Ohanian, Reddit co-founder and husband of the tennis superstar Serena Williams; and Brian Armstrong, co-founder of Coinbase. Notable clientele of polygenic embryo selection include OpenAI’s Sam Altman and Tesla’s Elon Musk.

Without regulation, key ethical and social questions raised by polygenic embryo selection will go unanswered: What kinds of traits should parents be allowed to select for? Could unreasonable expectations be placed on the children who were conceived with the technology? Are we quietly creating a genetic arms race that encodes existing social and economic inequalities into our very DNA?

Allowing companies to offer embryo selection will tilt social competition even further in favor of those already ahead. Regulation won’t stop scientific progress, and in fact, it is essential for ensuring that progress benefits society rather than dividing it.

Opinion on Live Science gives you insight on the most important issues in science that affect you and the world around you today, written by experts and leading scientists in their field.

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Ancient ‘Asgard’ microbe may have used oxygen long before it was plentiful on Earth, offering new clue to origins of complex life

Ancient ‘Asgard’ microbe may have used oxygen long before it was plentiful on Earth, offering new clue to origins of complex life

‘Universal’ nasal-spray vaccine protects against viruses, bacteria and allergens in mice

‘Universal’ nasal-spray vaccine protects against viruses, bacteria and allergens in mice

‘Proof by intimidation’: AI is confidently solving ‘impossible’ math problems. But can it convince the world’s top mathematicians?

‘Proof by intimidation’: AI is confidently solving ‘impossible’ math problems. But can it convince the world’s top mathematicians?

Your own voice could be your biggest privacy threat. How can we stop AI technologies exploiting it?

Your own voice could be your biggest privacy threat. How can we stop AI technologies exploiting it?

Artemis II update: NASA targets March 6 for launch of historic moon mission following successful ‘wet dress rehearsal’

Artemis II update: NASA targets March 6 for launch of historic moon mission following successful ‘wet dress rehearsal’

A coffin holding a dead ‘princess’ fell from an eroded cliff over 100 years ago — archaeologists just solved a major mystery about her

A coffin holding a dead ‘princess’ fell from an eroded cliff over 100 years ago — archaeologists just solved a major mystery about her

In a ‘race against time,’ archaeologists uncovered Roman-era footprints from a Scottish beach before the tide washed them away

In a ‘race against time,’ archaeologists uncovered Roman-era footprints from a Scottish beach before the tide washed them away

‘There will be leadership accountability’: Bungled Boeing Starliner mission put stranded NASA crew at risk, report says

‘There will be leadership accountability’: Bungled Boeing Starliner mission put stranded NASA crew at risk, report says

95 million-year-old Spinosaurus had a scimitar-shaped head crest and waded through the Sahara’s rivers like a ‘hell heron’

95 million-year-old Spinosaurus had a scimitar-shaped head crest and waded through the Sahara’s rivers like a ‘hell heron’

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Lakers’ win over Clippers is mixed bag when it comes  to takeaways

Lakers’ win over Clippers is mixed bag when it comes to takeaways

February 21, 2026
Former New Haven Police Chief Karl Jacobson charged with embezzling ,000

Former New Haven Police Chief Karl Jacobson charged with embezzling $85,000

February 21, 2026
Miss J. Alexander’s Friends Organize GoFundMe After Stroke and ‘America’s Next Top Model’ Documentary

Miss J. Alexander’s Friends Organize GoFundMe After Stroke and ‘America’s Next Top Model’ Documentary

February 21, 2026
Juan Soto, Nolan McLean’s epic 10-pitch Mets battle even featured Rock Paper Scissors

Juan Soto, Nolan McLean’s epic 10-pitch Mets battle even featured Rock Paper Scissors

February 21, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Trump tariff refunds: Will consumers see any of the 5 billion collected after the Supreme Court ruling?

Trump tariff refunds: Will consumers see any of the $175 billion collected after the Supreme Court ruling?

February 21, 2026
ICE arrests illegal immigrants convicted of violent, sexual crimes

ICE arrests illegal immigrants convicted of violent, sexual crimes

February 21, 2026
Minnesota Man Killed Neighbor, Kidnapped Pregnant Girlfriend and Her 4 Kids in Terrifying Rampage

Minnesota Man Killed Neighbor, Kidnapped Pregnant Girlfriend and Her 4 Kids in Terrifying Rampage

February 21, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.