Gurugram; A traumatised couple have moved court after coming to know that they share no genetic link with the twins born to them through In-Vitro Fertilisation (IVF).
The incident has sent shockwaves through the medical community, bringing renewed scrutiny to the regulatory mechanisms governing assisted reproductive technologies in India. The parents resorted to litigation only after the fertility clinic failed to provide any formal response or explanation regarding the severe sample mismatch, lawyers said.
A routine medical evaluation for a minor health issue flagged certain physiological traits that prompted doctors to suggest comprehensive genetic profiling several months after the successful delivery of the twins.
The subsequent deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) reports delivered a catastrophic revelation: a complete genetic mismatch confirming that neither the mother nor the father shared any biological link with the infants. The family alleges that the facility implanted embryos belonging to another couple, a mistake that points to an egregious breakdown in basic laboratory protocols, as reported by News18.
The distressed parents repeatedly contacted the management and embryology team at the IVF centre, seeking immediate clarity on how such a monumental error could occur. However, their desperate appeals for intern
al logs, cross-verification data, and medical files were reportedly met with absolute administrative silence. Left in an agonising emotional and legal limbo, the couple filed a formal petition before the court, demanding a thorough investigation into the clinic’s operational practices and immediate accountability for the psychological trauma inflicted upon their family.
Such an incident highlights a severe breach of the Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Act, legal experts tracking the development noted. The Act that mandates stringent double-witnessing protocols at every stage of gamete handling. In a standard, compliant embryology laboratory, electronic barcoding and mandatory dual-signing by two independent embryologists are required before any embryo transfer takes place. The allegation of a total mismatch suggests that these critical verification steps were either entirely bypassed or systematically ignored during the couple’s treatment cycle.
Such incidents have happened in the past. The National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) previously issued a landmark ruling against a prominent Delhi-based clinic, imposing a hefty penalty of 1.5 crore rupees for negligence after a genetic mix-up resulted in a child being born with an entirely different blood group and DNA profile than the parents. That historic judgment forced the Union Health Ministry to tighten licensing norms, but experts argue that enforcement remains uneven across standalone suburban clinics.
Experts say the legal battle ahead will be deeply complex, raising unprecedented questions regarding parental rights, custody frameworks, and the whereabouts of the couple’s actual biological embryos.
Health advocates are demanding that criminal liability be established for severe reproductive negligence even as the judicial process begins, arguing that manual labelling errors in embryology labs should be treated with the same severity as surgical malpractice.
