BOSTON — Kianni Arroyo clasps 8-year-old Sophia’s hands tightly as they spin around, giggling like mad. It’s late afternoon, and there are hot dogs on the grill, bubble wands on the lawn, balls flying through the air.
The midsummer reunion in a suburb west of the city looks like any other, but these family ties can’t be described with standard labels. Instead, Arroyo, a 21-year-old waitress from Orlando, is here to meet “DNA-in-laws,” various “sister-moms” and especially people like Sophia, a cherished “donor-sibling.”
Sophia and Arroyo were both conceived with sperm from Donor #2757, a bestseller. Over the years, Donor #2757 sired at least 29 girls and 16 boys, now ages 1 to 21, living in eight states and four countries. Arroyo is on a quest to meet them all, chronicling her journey on Instagram. She has to use an Excel spreadsheet to keep them all straight.
“We have a connection. It’s hard to explain, but it’s there,” said Arroyo, an only child who is both comforted and weirded-out by her ever-expanding family tree.

Kianni Arroyo, Zac LaRocca-Stravalle, twin sisters Ava and Sophia, and twin sisters Vivianna and Addeline, who all have the same donor father, meet up at a family reunion in the Boston area.
Thanks to mail-away DNA tests and a proliferation of online registries, people conceived with donated sperm and eggs are increasingly connecting with their genetic relatives, forming a growing community with complex relationships and unique concerns about the U.S. fertility industry. Like Arroyo, many have discovered dozens of donor siblings, with one group approaching 200 members — enormous genetic families without precedent in modern society.
Because most donations are anonymous, the resulting children often find it almost impossible to obtain crucial information. Medical journals have documented cases in which clusters of offspring have found each other while seeking treatment for the same rare genetic disease. The news is full of nightmarish headlines about sperm donors who falsified their educational backgrounds, hid illnesses or turned out to be someone other than expected — such as a fertility clinic doctor.
Now the donor-conceived community is starting to demand more government regulation — so far with mixed results. Earlier this year, Washington and Vermont became the first states to require clinics to collect donors’ medical history and to disclose that information to any resulting child. Similar bills have been introduced in California and Rhode Island.
But last month, the Food and Drug Administration rejected a petition from a donor offspring group that sought to limit the number of births per donor, mandate reporting of donor-conceived births and require donors to provide post-conception medical updates. Peter Marks, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, wrote that such oversight exceeds the FDA’s mission, which is limited to screening donors for communicable diseases. An FDA spokeswoman declined to comment further.
Sean Tipton, a spokesman for the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, which represents most of the nation’s fertility clinics, said such proposals would have infringed on the right to privacy and to procreate, giving government “control over who has children with whom.”
“We think these decisions are best made by the families, not by activists and certainly not by the government,” Tipton said.
The lack of federal action has infuriated members of donor families such as Wendy Kramer, a Colorado woman who penned the FDA petition.
“There is no government agency that wants to step in to regulate or oversee the business of creating human beings,” said Kramer, whose son, Ryan, 28, has so far discovered 16 half siblings conceived with sperm from the same donor. “As wonderful as the connections are, there is an underbelly. . . . It has really revealed how this lack of regulation has had ramifications for real families.”

Sperm donation laws by region
United States
Limit per donor: None; recommended 25 offspring per population of 800,000
Donor anonymity: Varies
Canada
Limit per donor: None; recommended 25 offspring per population of 800,000
Donor anonymity: Yes
Netherlands
Limit per donor: 25 offspring
Donor anonymity: No
Germany
Limit per donor: 15 offspring
Donor anonymity: No
Denmark
Limit per donor: 12 offspring
Donor anonymity: Varies
Britain
Limit per donor: Can donate to up to
10 families
Donor anonymity: No
New Zealand
Limit per donor: Can donate to up to
10 families
Donor anonymity: No
France
Limit per donor: 10 offspring
Donor anonymity: Yes
Spain
Limit per donor: 6 offspring
Donor anonymity: Yes
China
Limit per donor: 5 pregnancies
Donor anonymity: Yes
Hong Kong
Limit per donor: 3 offspring
Donor anonymity: Varies
Taiwan
Limit per donor: 1 offspring
Donor anonymity: Yes
Sources: Asian Journal of Andrology, July 2011. Reproductive Health, Jan. 2017. Fertility and Sterility, Jan. 2014. Council on Human Reproductive Technology (Hong Kong). Health Council of the Netherlands. Journal of Law and the Biosciences, April 2016. Government of New Zealand.
SHELLY TAN/THE WASHINGTON POST

Sperm donation laws by region
REGION
OFFSPRING LIMIT PER DONOR
DONOR ANONYMITY
No limit; recommended 25 offspring per population of 800,000
Varies
United States
No limit; recommended 25 offspring per population of 800,000
Canada
Yes
25 offspring
Netherlands
No
Germany
15 offspring
No
Denmark
12 offspring
Varies
Britain
Can donate to up to 10 families
No
New Zealand
Can donate to up to 10 families
No
10 offspring
France
Yes
Spain
6 offspring
Yes
China
Yes
5 pregnancies
3 offspring
Hong Kong
Varies
Taiwan
1 offspring
Yes
Sources: Asian Journal of Andrology, July 2011. Reproductive Health, Jan. 2017. Fertility and Sterility, Jan. 2014. Council on Human Reproductive Technology (Hong Kong). Health Council of the Netherlands. Journal of Law and the Biosciences, April 2016. Government of New Zealand.
SHELLY TAN/THE WASHINGTON POST
Family clans
Eighteen years ago, Kramer and Ryan founded what has since become the largest online site for the donor-conceived, the Donor Sibling Registry, or DSR. In simplest terms, the DSR is a matching site. People type in their donor number — an anonymous code assigned by the fertility clinic — and connect with others born from sperm or eggs from the same donor. It’s all voluntary, and contact is achieved through mutual consent.
Today, the DSR has more than 60,000 members and has helped connect about 16,000 offspring with their half siblings or donors. As the site grows, so does the potential for new connections. Ryan has discovered five “new” sisters in just the past four months.
Jennifer Moore, a 55-year-old graphic designer from Loveland, Colo., has two boys conceived with donor sperm. Through the DSR, they have connected with triplet half siblings in another part of the country.
The boys call one another “bro” and are all very athletic. They are also all “into crazy socks and hats and crazy fashion sense,” Moore said, adding: “As a parent, it has been a bizarre experience having that many clones of your children appear before your eyes.”
Their parents try to get all the half siblings together at least once a year, Moore said. Though her boys have a father, her ex-husband, she wants them to know more about their background and not wonder why they might look or act different from their parents.
“Foundationally, everyone has a right to know where they came from,” she said.
One of the most important revelations of the DSR has been to confirm the existence of prolific sperm donors — real-life versions of the Vince Vaughn character in the movie “The Delivery Man” who learns that he fathered 533 children through his donations.
Many countries set strict limits on the number of offspring a donor can sire. In Britain, it’s up to 10 families; in Netherlands, 25; in Taiwan, just one. But no such laws exist in the United States, where the American Society of Reproductive Medicine recommends limiting live births per donor to 25 per 800,000 population — about the size of San Francisco or Charlotte. In a nation of 326 million people, that works out to a staggering 10,175 possible children per donor.
Concerns about prolific donors are not theoretical. Kramer and other parents tell their kids to memorize their sperm or egg bank name and donor number, and to share that information with potential dates. She knows of a camp counselor who stumbled onto a half brother while talking with a camper. In another case, two women searching for roommates at Tulane University discovered they were half sisters.
Ava, 8, left, plays with her half siblings Vivianna and Addeline, twins, 8, during the reunion. Kianni Arroyo hugs her half sibling Ava. The reunion was held at the home of Rebecca, the mother of twin sisters Sophia and Ava.
Donor #2757
Kianni Arroyo had to work harder to meet her genetic family. The first person she found was her biological father.
Donor #2757 stands 5-foot-10 and weighs 185 pounds. He has hazel-green eyes, wavy brown hair and is descended from German, Irish and Native American stock. In his profile, he’s described as a photographer with a bachelor’s degree who likes biking, surfing and writing. He donated his sperm to pay off college student loans.
Arroyo went searching for her donor’s identity in her teens and met a person active in the donor-offspring community who had somehow gotten that confidential information. She friended her donor on Facebook and contacted him shortly before her 18th birthday. They met when he was in Orlando on a business trip. She drove to his hotel and looked for a man who looked like her.
“When I found him, I didn’t know whether to hug him or shake his hand or not touch him at all. It was really awkward,” Arroyo recalled. “But then he kind of opened his arms into a hug and accepted me. It was kind of relieving.” Donor #2757 told her he was still working as a photographer, that he was single and that he had no children of his own. Through Arroyo, he declined to be interviewed or identified, citing privacy concerns.
About a year later, the donor connected Arroyo with her first half sibling: JoAnna Alaia, 20, of Tampa, who works in business administration. She’s a twin, but her twin was not interested in meeting with Arroyo. So the two women rendezvoused near the highway, drove all night, got pulled over for speeding, and met with Donor #2757 the next day in his hometown.
Since then, their sibling group has mushroomed. Arroyo has discovered seven half siblings in Florida and seven more in New York, five in Massachusetts and four in Georgia. Because American sperm is sold widely overseas, she has also found half siblings in Australia, New Zealand and Canada.
So far, Arroyo is the oldest, but not by much. There are 10 other 20-somethings. Then there seems to be a decade-long gap before another batch of half siblings arrived, children now in elementary school.

Arroyo and her siblings by gender
Female
64%
Male
36%
When Arroyo and her siblings
were born
19 siblings were born
in this time frame
10 children
5
0
1997
2009
2011
2017

Arroyo and her siblings by gender and birth year
19 siblings were born
in this time frame
Female
64%
10 children
5
0
Male
1997
2009
2011
2017
36%
This summer, Arroyo’s vacation plans revolved around meeting her donor siblings. She, Sophia and Ava spent a few days on Cape Cod with a 9-year-old half sister from New York. Then they hosted a cookout in the Boston area for the Massachusetts-based families.
Five of Arroyo’s half siblings were at the reunion: Sophia and Ava, LaRocca-Stravalle and another set of twins, Addeline and Vivianna Juliani, age 8. Everyone noted the family resemblance: The laid-back, sporty kids all had wide smiles and prominent dimples on their right cheeks.
Kristen Juliani, one of the twins’ two mothers, recounted how a sperm bank sales person had recommended Donor #2757 as a “model” donor. She was not thrilled to learn that her donor was so popular.
“I don’t feel great about it,” she said. “There should be a cap on sales.”
Arroyo has mixed feelings, too. While every visit with her half siblings has been a blast, she finds it “worrying” that sperm banks permit so many children to be born from a single donor.
“Every time I find a new sibling,” she said, “I get anxiety and think to myself: When is it going to end?”
A few days before she left the reunion, Arroyo got a message from yet another half sister. Rylie Hager, 19, is a sophomore studying sociology at Temple University in Philadelphia. Arroyo invited her to join a group of half siblings who planned to meet Donor #2757 in mid-August. The first night, they went bowling, and Hager noted that three of the girls were wearing the same outfit: gray tank tops and shorts.
“It’s all really crazy,” she said. “These people are strangers, but because I’m related to them, they have all kind of accepted me.”
Hager said when she first found out about the size of her group of half siblings, she sent an alarmed text to her mom. “Is that exciting to you, or terrifying?” her mom asked.
Hager replied: “Both.”
Eddy Palanzo in Washington contributed to this report.
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