Microsoft word - ectopic_pregnancy_methotrexate_gray_paper.doc
Final Paper for the National Certification Program in Health Care Ethics
Submitted to Fr. Tad Pacholczyk, National Catholic Bioethics Center
Why Methotrexate is an Immoral Response to Ectopic Pregnancy Abstract
With tubal ectopic pregnancies continuing to be a pregnancy complication that results in the
unborn dying and even, at times, their mothers, a solution that respects the dignity of the person
must be found. Currently there are surgical and medical responses that save the mother’s life but
not yet the unborn’s. An ongoing debate in Catholic circles is whether the administration of the
drug methotrexate is an ethical solution to ectopic pregnancy. This paper examines the ethics of
this treatment by first considering the science of embryonic development in utero and in the
fallopian tube, as well as the mechanisms and uses of methotrexate itself. A discussion then
follows that considers concepts such as the immorality of directly killing the innocent, self-
defense in the face of an aggressor, suffering evil versus doing evil, the Principles of Totality and
Integrity, and The Principle of Double Effect. The conclusion drawn is that methotrexate
directly kills the innocent unborn child and is therefore unethical.
Introduction
The problem of ectopic pregnancies is a cause for grave concern. In such pregnancies, the
embryo implants outside of the uterine cavity, creating a situation where both the mother’s and
unborn child’s lives are in danger.1 In fact, ectopic pregnancy is “one of the leading causes of
maternal morbidity and mortality in the United States”2 and accounts “for about four percent of
the approximately twenty annual pregnancy-related deaths in Canada.”3 Furthermore, although
recently there was a case of an unborn child surviving an abdominal ectopic pregnancy,4 ninety-
seven percent5 of ectopic pregnancies occur in the fallopian tube where the embryo will not
survive. Because tubal ectopic pregnancies are the most common, this paper will focus on them.
The main interventions for this life threatening situation of tubal ectopic pregnancies are as
follows: salpingectomy (removing the fallopian tube), salpingostomy (also called salpingotomy:
cutting open the tube to remove the pregnancy), and methotrexate (drug treatment). 6,7 This
paper will argue that the treatment of methotrexate is unethical. First, it will describe the
1 Charles R. B. Beckmann et al., Obstetrics and Gynecology, 5th ed.(Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2006), 161. 2 John A. Rock and Howard W. Jones, Te Linde’s Operative Gynecology, 10th ed. (Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins), 798. 3 Heather Murray et al., “Diagnosis and treatment of ectopic pregnancy,” Canadian Medical Association Journal 173.8 (October 11, 2005): 905. 4 CTV.ca News Staff, “Miracle Baby Survives Abdominal Pregnancy,” CTV News, September 27, 2005, http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20050926/miracle_baby_050926/20050926?hub=Health (accessed July 9, 2009). 5 “Medical Management of Ectopic Pregnancy,” ACOG Practice Bulletin: Obstetrics and Gynecology, 111.6 (June 2008): 1479. 6 Beckmann et al., Obstetrics and Gynecology, 166-7. 7 There is a fourth response called expectant management, but it is not listed as an “intervention” per se as it doesn’t involve action, but instead observation. Expectant management is sometimes the approach taken if it appears the ectopic pregnancy will resolve itself. It may not, however, and so the risk of tubal rupture does threaten the woman: “Distinguishing patients who are experiencing spontaneous resolution of their ectopic pregnancies from patients who have proliferating ectopic pregnancies and require active intervention is difficult” (Ibid., 1483).
development of both intrauterine pregnancies and ectopic tubal pregnancies. Second it will
explain the mechanisms and uses of methotrexate. Third, it will provide a moral analysis,
showing that methotrexate is unethical because it is direct killing (thereby a case of doing evil
rather than suffering evil) and because it does not satisfy the Principle of Double Effect.
Intrauterine Pregnancies and Ectopic Pregnancies Described
In sexual reproduction, fertilization occurs in the fallopian tube. For approximately the next
three days, the newly conceived human being travels through the tube toward the uterus.8 In a
pregnancy that is functioning normally, she then makes her way into the uterus and at
approximately six days post-fertilization, she attaches to the endometrial epithelium.9 At this
point in pregnancy the unborn child has gone through the zygote and morula stages, and is now
During these three stages, the unborn child’s body is made up of cells called blastomeres.
During the zygote stage, these divide from two to four to eight, etc.11 By the time the unborn
child becomes a morula, twelve to sixteen of these blastomeres form a compact ball. The
subsequent blastocyst stage is identified when these blastomere cells form two parts: the
trophoblast and the inner cell mass.12 The inner cell mass is the main body of the embryo, which
has a fluid-filled space below it, and together those are surrounded by the trophoblast which will
8 Keith L. Moore, T.V.N. Persaud, and Kohei Shiota, Color Atlas of Clinical Embryology, 2nd ed. (Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Company, 2000), 5. 9 Keith L. Moore and T.V.N. Persaud, Before We Are Born: Essentials of Embryology and Birth Defects, 5th ed. (Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Company, 1998), 41. 10 Ibid., 4. 11 Moore et al., Color Atlas, 6. 12 Ibid.
form the “embryonic part of the placenta”13 and implant into the uterine wall. The trophoblast
also contributes to other extraembryonic support tissues necessary for the unborn child’s
survival: a future umbilical cord and the amnion, which is the flotation sac the embryo/fetus lives
in within the uterus.14 The embryonic germ layers and maternal endometrium also contribute to
Harvey J. Kliman, of the Yale University School of Medicine, describes the trophoblast as
When fully developed, the placenta serves as the interface between the mother and the
developing fetus. The placental trophoblasts are critical for a successful pregnancy by
mediating such critical steps as implantation, pregnancy hormone production, immune
protection of the fetus, increase in maternal vascular blood flow into the placenta, and
As early as three days after fertilization, the trophoblasts–the major cell type of the
placenta–begin to make human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), a hormone which insures
that the endometrium will be receptive to the implanting embryo. Over the next few days,
these same trophoblasts attach to and invade into the uterine lining… Over the next few
weeks the placenta begins to make hormones which control the basic physiology of the
mother in such a way that the fetus is supplied with the necessary nutrients and oxygen
needed for successful growth. The placenta also protects the fetus from immune attack by
the mother, removes waste products from the fetus, induces the mother to bring more
13 Moore et al., Before We Are Born, 45. 14 Lauren J. Sweeney, Basic Concepts in Embryology: A Student’s Survival Guide (New York: McGraw-Hill Professional, 1998), 44. 15 Ibid.
blood to the placenta, and near the time of delivery, produces hormones that matures the
fetal organs in preparation for life outside of the uterus.16
In short, the trophoblast (i.e., placenta) is an external body part of the unborn child, which
acts as a “middle man” between the unborn child’s body proper and her mother. To accomplish
its job, trophoblasts are, by nature, very invasive. In fact, if it were not for secretions from the
woman’s endometrium, trophoblasts would spread throughout the uterus.17
In the case of tubal ectopic pregnancy, instead of the trophoblasts implanting in the
endometrium, they burrow into the fallopian tube. This is a problem because this very narrow
tube was not designed to maintain a pregnancy. As a result, there can be rupture and severe
internal hemorrhage,18 which leads to embryonic death and very likely maternal death.
Why do ectopic pregnancies occur? Specific risk factors include these: chronic pelvic
inflammatory disease, previous ectopic pregnancy, progestin-only contraceptives, assisted
reproductive technologies, multiple sex partners, and developmental tubal anomalies.19 A theory
for why this is the case is because of damage to the structure or the function of the tube.20 The
timeline of an embryo’s development is generally constant, but if there is tubal damage, the
transport of the embryo can take longer than the normal three days, or her motility can be
16 Harvey J. Kliman, “From Trophoblast to Human Placenta,” Encyclopedia of Reproduction, December 12, 1998, http://www.med.yale.edu/obgyn/kliman/placenta/articles/EOR_Placenta/Trophtoplacenta.html (accessed June 25, 2009). 17 Ibid. 18 Michael S. Baggish and Mickey M. Karram, Atlas of Pelvic Anatomy and Gynecologic Surgery, 2nd ed. (Philadelphia: Elsevier Saunders, 2006): Ch. 21. 19 Rock, Te Linde’s, 801. 20 D. Keith Edmonds, ed., Dewhurst’s Textbook of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 7th ed. (Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing, 2007), 107.
obstructed altogether.21 In such a situation, the embryo’s development advances as normal but
without the corresponding environmental change, and that can result in the trophoblasts
preparing for implantation when the embryo is yet to be in the uterus. It should be pointed out,
however, that not all causes of ectopic pregnancy are known. Some have hypothesized that
perhaps chromosomal abnormalities of the embryo are a risk factor for ectopic pregnancy, but
Methotrexate Explained
Methotrexate is a drug used to treat conditions such as cancer and psoriasis. Its mechanism
of action in these cases is to slow the growth of cells: cancer cells in the case of the former, skin
cells with regards to the latter.23 Because of methotrexate’s ability to impact cellular growth, it is
a candidate for ectopic pregnancy treatment.
But how, exactly, does it impact an ectopic pregnancy? Does it interfere with the growth of
the embryo’s external body part, the trophoblastic tissue? Does it interfere with the cell growth
in the embryo’s body proper? Does it interfere with both? Methotrexate’s precise mechanism of
action on an ectopic pregnancy is not known.24 What is known is that it affects all rapidly
dividing tissues in the body (which is why the conditions some women have make them
ineligible for this treatment).25 One study reported, “Although the exact mechanism of action is
21 Ibid. 22 Jean Bouyer et al., “Risk Factors for Ectopic Pregnancy: A Comprehensive Analysis Based on a Large Case-Control, Population-based Study in France,” American Journal of Epidemiology 157.3 (2003): 190, 192. 23 “Methotrexate,” Medline Plus, April 1, 2009, http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/druginfo/meds/a682019.html (accessed June 30, 2009). 24 Gary H. Lipscomb et al., “Predictors of Success of Methotrexate Treatment in Women With Tubal Ectopic Pregnancies,” The New England Journal of Medicine 341.26 (December 23, 1999): 1974. 25 “Medical Management of Ectopic Pregnancy,” 1479–80.
unknown, methotrexate is believed to cause either resorption or tubal abortion of the
Methotrexate is not only used on pregnancies that are ectopic. It is used to induce
therapeutic abortions on intrauterine pregnancies. One website advocating abortion describes
In a Methotrexate (MTX) Abortion, it stops embryonic cells from dividing and
multiplying and is a non-surgical method of ending pregnancy in its early stages. Within
a few days or weeks of receing [sic] an injection of Methotrexate (MTX) at the clinic the,
[sic] the pregnancy ends through an experience similar to an early miscarriage.27
A Canadian abortion provider whose clinic specializes in medical abortions by combining
methotrexate and misoprostol (the latter induces contractions) reported that “Methotrexate is
cytotoxic to [the] trophoblast and hence causes abortion…”28
Methotrexate is called a folic acid antagonist29 because it works against folic acid, which
bodies use to make new cells.30 Methotrexate inhibits DNA synthesis and repair31 and it has
26 Lipscomb et al., “Predictors of Success of Methotrexate,” 1974. 27 “Methotrexate (MTX) for Early Abortion,” Feminist Women’s Health Center, http://www.fwhc.org/abortion/mtxinfo.htm (accessed July 8, 2009). 28 Ellen R. Wiebe, “Abortion Induced with Methotrexate and Misoprostol,” Canadian Medical Association Journal 154.2 (January 15, 1996): 166. 29 Rock, Te Linde’s, 807. 30 “Facts about Folic Acid,” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, March 31, 2009, http://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/folicacid/about.html (accessed July 9, 2009). 31 “Medical Management of Ectopic Pregnancy,” 1480.
proven effective in treating gestational trophoblastic disease.32 In fact, it is because of that latter
mechanism that methotrexate was suggested as a treatment for ectopic pregnancy.33
In 1998, a study on methotrexate as abortion for intrauterine pregnancies examined whether
methotrexate affected the trophoblast or the corpus luteum (a part of the woman which “secretes
progesterone… [and] cause[s] the endometrial glands to secrete and prepare the endometrium for
implantation of the blastocyst”34). This was its conclusion:
Methotrexate most likely primarily affects trophoblast production of human chorionic
gonadotropin, as evidenced by a blunting of the expected increase in serum beta-human
chorionic gonadotropin resulting in less support for the production of progesterone by the
corpus luteum. However, changes in progesterone levels after methotrexate
administration were inconsistent and are unlikely to represent the ultimate effect of
methotrexate in abortion. The less-than-normal increase in serum beta-human chorionic
gonadotropin levels after methotrexate administration is most likely a result of disruption
of cytotrophoblast syncytialization. This disruption may be the true effect of methotrexate
in destabilizing the implantation site of an early pregnancy.35
That same year another study was done and it also concluded that methotrexate has a
Our conclusions from this study are that methotrexate acts primarily to derail the normal
developmental programme of the trophoblast stem cell population, as well as to decrease
32 Rock, Te Linde’s, 807. 33 Liberato V. Mukul and Stephanie B. Teal, “Current Management of Ectopic Pregnancy,” Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinics 34.3 (September 2007). 34 Moore etal., Before We Are Born, 28. 35 Mitchell D. Creinin et al., “Methotrexate Effects on Trophoblast and the Corpus Luteum in Early Pregnancy,” American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 179.3 (September 1998): 604—609.
LGL [large granular lymphocyte] cell numbers in the decidua [the woman’s endometrium
Further evidence that methotrexate impacts the trophoblast is that it has been administered
following failed salpingostomies. In those cases, not all trophoblastic tissue was removed so it
continued to proliferate. Methotrexate was then administered to counteract that.38
Interestingly, studies have shown that if methotrexate is administered when there is the
presence of an embryonic heartbeat, methotrexate is less efficacious.39 High hCG and
progesterone levels have also been associated with methotrexate failure rates.40
A Moral Analysis
The dilemma of an ectopic pregnancy can be summarized this way: A part of the baby (the
trophoblast) is doing something it should be doing (implanting) but in a part of the mother it
shouldn’t be doing it in (the fallopian tube). If nothing is done, the mother and baby will die. If
something is done, current technology enables the mother to be saved but not the baby.
Is it ethical to do something? It is only ethical if that something is not evil, as one may not
do evil in order to bring about a good.41 Methotrexate is an immoral means to address this
problem because it directly kills an innocent person (thus is an example of doing evil rather than
suffering evil) and it does not satisfy the criteria of the Principle of Double Effect.
36 Moore etal., Before We Are Born, 123. 37 Julie A.DeLoia, Ann M.Stewart-Akers, and Mitchell D.Creinin, “Effects of Methotrexate on Trophoblast Proliferation and Local Immune Responses,” Human Reproduction 13.4 (1998): 1063. 38 Rock, Te Linde’s, 808. 39 Jacque L. Slaughter and David A. Grimes, “Methotrexate Therapy: Nonsurgical Management of Ectopic Pregnancy,” West J. Med 162.3 (March 1995): 226. 40 Liberato and Teal, “Current Management of Ectopic Pregnancy.” 41 Catechism of the Catholic Church: Modifications from the Editio Typica, trans. United States Catholic Conference, Inc. (New York: Doubleday, 1997), n. 1789.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church explicitly condemns killing innocent human beings:
Human life is sacred because from its beginning it involves the creative action of God
and it remains for ever in a special relationship with the Creator, who is its sole end. God
alone is the Lord of life from its beginning until its end: no one can under any
circumstance claim for himself the right directly to destroy an innocent human being.42
In Evangelium Vitae, John Paul II relates that teaching to a condemnation of abortion:
…procured abortion is the deliberate and direct killing, by whatever means it is carried out, of a human being in the initial phase of his or her existence, extending from conception to birth …Therefore, by the authority which Christ conferred upon Peter and
his Successors, in communion with the Bishops…I declare that direct abortion, that is, abortion willed as an end or as a means, always constitutes a grave moral disorder, since
it is the deliberate killing of an innocent human being.43
The very administration of methotrexate shows how it is deliberate and direct killing: It
generally is administered to the woman intramuscularly (or can be given orally).44 It is given to
her body, not to treat a problem with one of her body parts, but in expectation that it will travel
through her body to directly reach the baby’s body. In fact, in some cases methotrexate has been
administered directly into the embryo or embryonic/fetal sac.45,46
42 Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 2258. 43 John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae: On the Value and Inviolability of Human Life (Washington, DC: U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, 1995), n. 58, 62. 44 Beckmann et al., Obstetrics and Gynecology, 167. 45 Rock, Te Linde’s, 808. 46 Stuart H. Shippey et al., “Diagnosis and Management of Hepatic Ectopic Pregnancy,” Obstetrics and Gynecology 109.2 (February 2007): 545.
Someone may argue that while it is unethical to administer methotrexate into the embryonic
sac (because that directly kills the child), giving it intramuscularly directly targets the trophoblast
with the effect of that being the death of the child.47
First of all, there is no evidence that methotrexate distinguishes between the trophoblast and
the body proper. In fact, it targets all proliferating cells—which is why some women aren’t even
candidates for this treatment.48 Beyond that, however, the trophoblast is an essential organ for
the unborn child that happens to be external to the embryo’s body. As was described earlier,
trophoblasts “are critical for a successful pregnancy”49 and ensure “the fetus is supplied with the
necessary nutrients and oxygen needed for successful growth.”50 So even if methotrexate only
targeted that part, it would be immoral. An embryo can survive without, for example, a hand,
but she cannot live without the trophoblast. To understand the importance of that body part,
consider this: If Person A cuts off the hand of Person B, A is not killing B. But if A cuts out B’s
heart, then A is killing B. Attacking the trophoblast is analogous to cutting out the heart, not
47 Fr. Albert Moraczewski makes a point along these lines when he says, “Because the trophoblastic cells are rapidly dividing they are affected more quickly and fully than cells of the embryo proper… Once the synthesis of proteolytic enzymes stops (as a result of MTX [methotrexate]), the trophoblastic activity ceases and further damage is prevented. The embryo proper also dies eventually; this is foreseen but not willed as an end or as a means” (, “The Ethics of Treating Ectopic Pregnancy,” in Catholic Health Care Ethics: A Manual for Ethics Committees, ed. Peter J. Cataldo and Albert S. Moraczewski (Massachusetts: The National Catholic Bioethics Center, 2002), 10B/4. 48 Methotrexate is not an option for all patients. In fact, women with the following conditions may not be treated by methotrexate: Overt or laboratory evidence of immunodeficiency, Alcoholism, alcoholic liver disease, or other chronic liver disease, Preexisting blood dyscrasias, such as bone marrow hypoplasia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, or significant anemia, Known sensitivity to methotrexate, Active pulmonary disease, Peptic ulcer disease, Hepatic, renal, or hematologic dysfunction (“Medical Management of Ectopic Pregnancy,” ACOG Practice Bulletin: Obstetrics and Gynecology 111.6 (June 2008): 1479). 49 Kliman, “From Trophoblast to Human Placenta.” 50 Ibid.
cutting off the hand. Because methotrexate “eradicate[s] trophoblastic tissue in an ectopic
pregnancy”51 it directly kills the unborn.
But since the action of the trophoblast and subsequent growth of the unborn child will lead to
tubal demise, could administration of methotrexate be viewed as a woman using self-defense
against an aggressor? One may even appeal to the Catechism to argue that the action of
methotrexate isn’t to kill the unborn but to defend one’s own life:
The legitimate defense of persons and societies is not an exception to the prohibition
against the murder of the innocent that constitutes intentional killing. ‘The act of self-
defense can have a double effect: the preservation of one’s own life; and the killing of the
aggressor… The one is intended, the other is not.’52
For that to apply, the unborn would have to be viewed as an aggressor, not an innocent
person, because Evangelium Vitae points out that “the killing of innocent human creatures, even
if carried out to help others, constitutes an absolutely unacceptable act.”53 The unborn, however,
are not aggressors. Due to their level of development, they do not have the ability to choose to
do harm. They cannot be anything but innocent.
One may counteract that the unborn child may not be consciously choosing to act as an
aggressor, but her behavior is nonetheless aggressive. Actually, the unborn child is doing what
she should be doing. The growth and development of the trophoblast and subsequent burrowing
of the embryo’s trophoblast into the mother is a normal part of the development of the unborn
and the reproduction of the human species. What is abnormal about this situation is the location
51 Rock, Te Linde’s, 807. 52 Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 2263. 53 John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae, n. 63.
This is not the unborn child’s fault. As was previously discussed, while the ultimate reason
for ectopics is not always known, problems with tubal function or structure are causes of ectopics
(which could have even resulted from the mother’s lifestyle choices). So it could be said that the
baby’s body is working correctly; the mother’s body is not.
Even in the absence of complete knowledge as to why ectopics occur, it is reasonable to state
that just as a woman doesn’t directly choose ectopic pregnancy neither does the unborn child. In
fact, John Paul II rejected the notion of the unborn child as an aggressor when he said,
The moral gravity of procured abortion is apparent in all its truth if we recognize that we
are dealing with murder and, in particular, when we consider the specific elements
involved. The one eliminated is a human being at the very beginning of life. No one
more absolutely innocent could be imagined. In no way could this human being ever be
considered an aggressor, much less an unjust aggressor! He or she is weak, defenceless,
even to the point of lacking that minimal form of defence consisting in the poignant
power of a newborn baby’s cries and tears. The unborn child is totally entrusted to the
protection and care of the woman carrying him or her in the womb.54
The presence of the unborn in the fallopian tube does not change who the unborn child is,
particularly her innocence, nor does it change the mother’s responsibility to protect and care for
her own offspring. And yet, the mother also has “the right and duty to protect and preserve [her]
bodily and functional integrity.”55 Where these two obligations appear to conflict, one’s actions
should be guided by the notion that it is better to suffer evil than to do evil.56
54 John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae, n. 58. 55 National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services, 4th ed. (Washington, CD: U.S. Catholic Conference, Inc., 2001), n. 29. 56 Diego O. Cuevas, “Hysterectomy with Coerced Abortion: A Case Study in Psychological Coercion,” Ethics & Medics 33.6 (June 2008): 4.
This moral principle is understood with the following analogy: Imagine a woman has been
arrested and taken to a concentration camp. She is standing in line holding her child when a
guard says to her, “I am going to kill both you and your child; however, if you kill your child, I
Clearly it would be wrong for the mother to kill her child, even though doing so would stop
the guard from killing her. No matter how important it is to preserve one’s life, that end may not
be achieved by doing evil, namely killing an innocent human being. Even if the woman had
other children to care for, that still would not justify her preserving her own life through killing
If she kills the child, she bears responsibility for the child’s death. If the guard kills the child,
he bears responsibility for the child’s death. In the former, the mother does evil. In the latter,
This does not mean, however, that the mother must not respond at all. Just because one may
not do evil, it does not follow one should do nothing. As the guard attempts to kill her or the
child, the mother may use the amount of force necessary to stop that act of aggression—her
While not identical to ectopic pregnancy because with that there is no aggressor, the analogy
is nonetheless similar in that two people are in a situation where death awaits them. The unborn
child may not be killed to save the mother just as the aforementioned born child may not be
killed to save the mother. But just because it is doing evil to administer methotrexate, does not
mean there aren’t ethical alternatives.
This is where removing the expanding fallopian tube through salpingectomy is a reasonable
course of action. First, it is very possible that the tube itself has underlying structural or
functional problems that caused the ectopic to begin with, and so it is good to remove that
pathological organ. Second, if a non-vital organ is threatening the well being of one’s whole
body, it is good to remove that organ. The mother can live without the fallopian tube, but in the
current state of affairs she cannot live with it (if it bursts). In fact, the Principles of Totality and
Integrity support this action in response to ectopics: “A part of the human body may be
sacrificed if that sacrifice means continued survival for the whole person.”57,58
That principle shows how directly targeting the trophoblast is fundamentally different from
removing the tube: methotrexate sacrifices part of the baby (the trophoblast) and that doesn’t
result in continued survival for the baby. That is direct killing. So too, as discussed, is it
immoral to directly kill the baby for the mother. But to remove the tube is to sacrifice a part of
the woman in order to have continued survival of the whole woman.
But what of the death of the embryo once the fallopian tube is no longer attached to the
woman’s body? In that case, the child’s death would be an effect of a good action. It would be a
case of evil suffered rather than evil done. How this is moral and methotrexate is not can be
further understood by considering The Principle of Double Effect.
At the outset of this principle is the idea that one may never commit evil, no matter how
noble her intentions. After all, if a good end is sufficient to rationalize doing evil, where does
the line get drawn? And by whose standards? It would be license for anyone to do any wrong if
57 Ethical and Religious Directives, n. 29. 58 National Catholic Bioethics Center, “Principles of Medical Ethics,” National Certification Program in Health Care Ethics Module 2-1 (September 2008): 1.
they could just show how good could come from it. To choose to do wrong (even if to bring
about a good) is acting contrary to God’s laws. As St. Augustine pointed out, sin is “an
utterance, a deed, or a desire contrary to the eternal law.”59 Sin is so destructive to humans that
Christ died to save humans from its consequences. Sin, therefore, must not be chosen for its own
What this principle does recognize, however, is that sometimes when we commit good
actions, there are both good and bad effects.60 Just as a good end does not make a bad means
good, so too does a bad end not make a good means bad. Even then, however, one must be
discerning when committing behavior that has a good and bad effect.61 This principle stipulates
a number of conditions that must be met when choosing to do a good behavior has both good and
1. The action in itself must be good or indifferent. The action must not be intrinsically
evil. In other words, the object of the act must be capable of being ordered to God and
to the good of one’s neighbor and oneself;
2. The good effect cannot be obtained through the bad effect (because then the end
would justify the means). The foreseen beneficial effects must not be achieved by
3. There must be a proportion between the good and bad effects brought about (e.g. life
against life); The foreseen beneficial effects must be equal to or greater than the
foreseen harmful effects (the proportionate judgment).
59 Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1849. 60 National Catholic Bioethics Center, “Principles of Medical Ethics,” National Certification Program in Health Care Ethics Module 2-2 (September 2008): 1. 61 Ibid.
4. The intention of the subject must be directed towards the good effect, and merely
tolerate the bad effect. That is, the direct intention of the agent must be to achieve the
beneficial effects and to avoid the foreseen harmful effects as far as possible, that is,
one must only indirectly intend the harm.
5. Some say there is also a fifth requirement - that there does not exist another
possibility or avenue. In other words, no other means of achieving those effects are
When one looks at methotrexate (contrasted with salpingectomy) in light of these conditions,
it is clear why methotrexate is unethical:
1. As already explained, methotrexate itself is “the directly intended termination of
pregnancy before viability.”63 The “sole immediate effect”64 of this drug which targets a
vital external organ (and likely the rest of the body) of the unborn child “is the
termination of pregnancy.”65 Therefore, it is intrinsically evil. In contrast, salpingectomy
targets the expanding fallopian tube. In other words, the former targets an essential part
of the baby’s body to save the woman’s body. The latter targets the woman’s non-
essential body part to save the woman’s body entire.
2. The good effect of the mother not dying is obtained directly through the bad action of the
child being killed. In contrast with salpingectomy, the good effect of the mother not
dying is directly obtained through removing the tube. She isn’t saved because the child
was killed. She is saved because a part of her was going to burst and kill her and it was
62 Ibid. 63 Ethical and Religious Directives, n. 45. 64 Ibid. 65 Ibid.
removed before doing that. A further indicator that the child’s death is an effect with
salpingectomy but a means with methotrexate, is when one considers future technological
advances. If at some point it becomes possible to save the child, would the current
practice of methotrexate leave us with a child to attempt to, for example, resuscitate or re-
implant? It does not, because the action itself kills the baby, whereas with
salpingectomy, the child lacks a proper environment. It may become possible to transfer
her to a safe environment in the future, and with salpingectomy we’d have the body to do
3. With salpingectomy there is proportion between the good effect (mother living) and the
bad effect (baby dying). With methotrexate, although it is life for life, the significant
difference is that the baby dying isn’t an effect of a good action but the outcome of an
4. While in both cases the agent may state his intention is directed towards the good effect
of the mother living, and he merely tolerates the child’s death, the action of methotrexate
When one considers the three sources of the morality of a human act: object, circumstances,
and end,66 it becomes even more clear how methotrexate is immoral but salpingectomy is moral.
If any of these three sources of morality are bad, then the act itself is bad; said another way, for
the action to be good, all three aspects must be good in themselves.67 To start with a simple
example, reading a textbook (object) during church (circumstances), to prepare for a biology
exam (end) is bad because of the circumstances (one should pay attention in church). But
66 William E. May, Catholic Bioethics and the Gift of Human Life, 2nd ed. (Indiana: Our Sunday Visitor Publishing, 2008), 52. 67 Ibid., 53–4.
reading a textbook (object), on your day off (circumstances), to prepare for an exam (end), is
good because all three sources are good. With salpingectomy, removing a non-vital organ
(object) when its expansion is threatening the woman’s life (circumstances) to save the woman’s
life (end) is good. Whereas with methotrexate, targeting a vital organ of the innocent unborn
(object) when the mother’s expanding fallopian tube (that the baby is in) is threatening the
woman’s life (circumstances) to save the woman’s life (end) is wrong because the object
involves aborting the pregnancy/killing the child.
Someone may respond that methotrexate would satisfy The Principle of Double Effect if the
object of the act were to help the mother, as outlined in guideline forty-seven of the Ethical and
Operations, treatments, and medications that have as their direct purpose the cure of a
proportionately serious pathological condition of a pregnant woman are permitted when
they cannot be safely postponed until the unborn child is viable, even if they will result in
But the direct purpose of methotrexate isn’t to cure a pathological condition in the pregnant
woman (e.g., her fallopian tube); it is to target the baby’s vital organ (the trophoblast). Contrast
that with a treatment that would fall under the aforementioned directive: chemotherapy during
pregnancy.69 If a pregnant woman could die from cancer, it is ethical for her to have
chemotherapy treatment even if the chemotherapy will kill the baby.70
68 Ethical and Religious Directives, n. 47. 69 This would apply to situations when the unborn child was not yet viable. Otherwise, if the unborn child was viable, and the chemotherapy could have a harmful effect on the child, it would be good to induce labour first and provide the unborn treatment in a neonatal intensive care unit. 70 May, Catholic Bioethics, 192.
In that case, cancer is a serious pathological condition of a pregnant woman. And
chemotherapy is administered to attack something in her body (cancer) that must be eliminated
in order to preserve her whole body. Because the unborn child is also in the woman’s body, the
child’s death is an effect of doing a good thing, which is attacking life-threatening cancer.71 But
she isn’t saved through the death of her child; after all, if she wasn’t pregnant chemotherapy
could still save her. Although methotrexate is also a cancer drug, the difference is that it isn’t
administered to treat a pathology of the woman. By targeting the unborn child’s vital organ, it is
administered—not to harm something that is inherently harmful—but to harm someone who is
innocent. So in this case the woman is saved by means of the child’s death.
Conclusion
Because methotrexate specifically targets the vital organ of the unborn child (and possibly
the embryo’s body proper) it is therefore killing, direct abortion, and is not moral management
It is worth pointing out that this position may be difficult to accept because in rejecting
methotrexate, its benefits are lost: It is less invasive than surgery and the patient can be managed
on an outpatient basis.72 Furthermore, because it doesn’t remove the fallopian tube, the woman’s
fertility is preserved (although there is a chance of a subsequent ectopic pregnancy in that
tube73). But as has been discussed, the ends do not justify the means. The question when
considering an action is not, “What is easy or beneficial?” but instead, “What is right?”
Although methotrexate cannot be given to all women, it nonetheless is a common treatment
for ectopic pregnancy. Not only do the implications of this paper mean pregnant women should
71 It should be noted that this would only be done where there isn’t another, better, means to address this problem. 72 Edmonds, Dewhurst’s Textbook, 111. 73 Ibid., 107.
reject methotrexate as a form of treatment for ectopic pregnancy, but also that physicians, nurses,
and other health care professionals should not participate in the administration of methotrexate.
This is certainly a challenging position to hold as it invites criticism. But it also provides an
opportunity to witness, teach, and strive for ethical alternatives. As it says in the Ethical and
In a time of new medical discoveries, rapid technological developments, and social
change, what is new can either be an opportunity for genuine advancement in human
culture, or it can lead to policies and actions that are contrary to the true dignity and
vocation of the human person… Through science the human race comes to understand
God’s wonderful work; and through technology it must conserve, protect, and perfect
nature in harmony with God’s purposes.74
74 Ethical and Religious Directives, General Introduction.
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