UK may approve creating babies with DNA from 3 people
Britain may allow a controversial technique
to create babies using DNA from three people, a move that would help
couples avoid passing on rare genetic diseases, the country's top
medical officer says.
The new techniques
help women with faulty mitochondria, the energy source in a cell, from
passing on to their babies defects that can result in such diseases
as muscular dystrophy, epilepsy, heart problems and mental
retardation. About one in 200 children is born every year in Britain
with a mitochondrial disorder.
For a
woman with faulty mitochondria, scientists take only the healthy
genetic material from her egg or embryo. They then transfer that into a
donor egg or embryo that still has its healthy mitochondria but has
had the rest of its key DNA removed. The fertilized embryo is then
transferred into the womb of the mother.
Some
groups oppose artificial reproduction techniques and believe the
destruction of eggs or embryos to be immoral. British tabloids jumped
on the procedure when it was first announced in 2008 and labeled it the
creation of a three-parent baby -- the mother, the donor and the
father -- a charge scientists claim is inaccurate because the amount
of DNA from the donor egg is insignificant.
"Scientists
have developed ground-breaking new procedures which could stop these
diseases being passed on," Britain's chief medical officer, Dr. Sally
Davies, said in a statement on Friday. "It's only right that we look
to introduce this life-saving treatment as soon as we can."
Similar research is going on in the U.S., where the embryos are not being used to produce children.
Earlier
this year, the U.K.'s fertility regulator said it found most people
supported the new in vitro fertilization methods after a public
consultation that included hearings and written submissions. Critics
have previously slammed the methods as unethical and say there are other
ways for people with genetic problems to have healthy children, like
egg donation or tests to screen out potentially problematic embryos.
In
a response to the public consultation, the charity Christian Medical
Fellowship said the techniques were unethical. "We do not consider
that the hunt for `therapies' that might prevent a small number of
disabled children (with mitochondrial disease) being born justifies
the destruction of hundreds if not thousands of embryonic human lives,"
the group said. It also said there were lingering concerns about the
safety of the techniques.
British law
forbids altering a human egg or an embryo before transferring it into a
woman, so such treatments are currently only allowed for research.
The government says it plans to publish draft guidelines later this
year before introducing a final version to be debated in the U.K.
Parliament next year. Politicians would need to approve the use of the
new techniques before patients could be treated.
If
British lawmakers agree, the U.K. would become the first country in
the world where the technique could be used to create babies. Experts
say the procedures would likely only be used in about a dozen women
every year.
"Many of these
(mitochondrial) conditions are so severe that they are lethal in
infancy, creating a lasting impact upon the child's family," said
Alistair Kent, director of the charity, Genetic Alliance U.K., in a
statement. "An added option for families at risk of having a child with
such a condition is welcome."
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