Especially this paragraph:
The process is also difficult and expensive. P.G.D., which requires in vitro fertilization, can cost tens of thousands of dollars. While insurance companies often pay for the more traditional uses of the procedure, they have not done so for cancer-risk genes, fertility experts say. The barrier to affordability, some critics fear, could make preimplantation diagnosis for cancer risk the first significant step toward a genetic class divide in which the wealthy will become more genetically pure than the poor.
If this took hold as a common procedure (granted, it would take some time for that to happen, and it's not a certainty that it would) you'd have your genetically pure elite, and your ever day working force, relegated to the janitorial and other menial staffs.
There's also this consideration, of which we will not know the impact, if any, for decades yet:
Prospective parents who want to avail themselves of P.G.D. must first undergo the same in vitro fertilization process often used to assist infertile couples, in which eggs are extracted from the mother and fertilized with the father’s sperm in a petri dish.
When the resulting embryos are three days old, doctors remove a single cell from each and analyze its DNA. Only embryos without the defective gene are then considered candidates to implant in the mother’s uterus.
The out-of-pocket costs often exceed $25,000, depending on how many in vitro cycles are required. Because embryos are selected for their genetic status, rather than solely by which look the healthiest, the chance that they will fail to develop after implantation is higher. And
despite the birth of thousands of apparently healthy babies after P.G.D., there is still concern that the long-term effects of removing a cell from an eight-cell embryo have not been studied enough.http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/03/health/03gene.web.html?pagewanted=1&ei=5094&en=56d2e2bde7909ba7&hp&ex=1157342400&adxnnl=0&partner=homepage&adxnnlx=1157288785-qNUDia1D/oSKDhSQA0b1mQA brand-new developing human embryo has eight cells at the point at which they remove one. How does the body develop missing 1/8th of its intended makeup? What unknown effects might this lack of material mean to the body, long-term?