Courtesy: Business insider |
The US
National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine today submitted a report
laying down guidelines for genetically modifying human embryos to eliminate
devastating genetic conditions.
This 261page
report follows the conclusion of 2015 International Summit on Human Gene
Editing. It took multidisciplinary committee experts a full year to perform in depth
review of literature, monitoring the latest advancement and getting input from
all the prominent players in field of human gene editing.
The committee
set forth specific criteria before experimentation and clinical trials can
begin regarding these heritable germline
mutation. The criteria for heritable germline editing by National Academy of Science and National Academy of medicine are:[1]
- Absence of reasonable
alternatives
- Restriction to preventing
a serious disease or condition
- Restriction to editing
genes that have been convincingly demonstrated to cause or to strongly
predispose to the disease or condition
- Restriction to converting such
genes to versions that are prevalent in the population and are known to be
associated with ordinary health with little or no evidence of adverse
effects
- Availability of credible pre-clinical
and/or clinical data on risks and potential health benefits of the
procedures
- Ongoing, rigorous oversight
during clinical trials of the effects of the procedure on the health and
safety of the research participants
- Comprehensive plans for
long-term, multigenerational follow-up while still respecting personal
autonomy
- Maximum transparency consistent
with patient privacy
- Continued reassessment of both
health and societal benefits and risks, with broad on-going participation
and input by the public
- Reliable oversight mechanisms to
prevent extension to uses other than preventing a serious disease or
condition
At present genome editing, should not be used for creating designer human
beings with all the chosen, positive traits.
Alta Charo,
a bioethicist at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and co-chair of the report
said “Up until now, we’ve been talking only hypothetically and most people
assumed we simply wouldn’t ever do this. We are not saying that you have to or
you should, but we are saying that if you can meet these criteria it is
permissible.”
Many
researchers who opposed the gene editing technique where disappointed by the
green signal.
George
Church, a geneticist at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts opined
that it is difficult to draw a line between medical use and creating ‘super
humans’.
Scientist also expressed concerns over ‘Medical tourism’ as scientist
working in countries with less stringent regulation will start modifying
embryos for purpose other than medical reasons.
The complete report can be download here
The summary
of recommendations can be found here
The principles
for the governance of Human Genome Editing can be found here.
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