Britain's parliament voted last year to become the first in the
world to allow the 3-parent in-vitro-fertilization (IVF)technique,
which doctors say will prevent incurable inherited diseases but
critics see as a step towards "designer babies".
Having completed pre-clinical tests involving more than 500 eggs
from 64 donor women, researchers from Britain's Newcastle University
said the technique, called “early pronuclear transfer”, does not
harm early embryonic development.
The technique also showed promise in being able to "greatly reduce"
the level of faulty mitochondria in the embryo, the researchers said
- confirming hopes that it is likely to reduce the risk of mothers
passing on debilitating and often life-limiting mitochondrial
disease to their children.
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"The key message is that we have found no evidence the technique is
unsafe. Embryos created by this technique have all the
characteristics to lead to a pregnancy," said Doug Turnbull,
director of Newcastle's Center for Mitochondrial Research, who
co-led the study.
"This study using normal human eggs is a major advance in our work
towards preventing transmission of mitochondrial DNA disease," he
added.
Pronuclear transfer involves intervening in the fertilization
process to remove mitochondria, which act as tiny energy-generating
batteries inside cells, and which, if faulty, can cause inherited
fatal heart problems, liver failure, brain disorders, blindness and
muscular dystrophy.
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The treatment is known as "three-parent" in vitro fertilization (IVF)
because the babies, born from genetically modified embryos, would
have DNA from a mother, a father and from a female donor.
The results of this study, published on Wednesday in the journal
Nature, will be considered by Britain's Human Fertilization and
Embryology Authority, which will ultimately decide whether to issue
the first license to a clinic.
That would allow couples affected by mitochondrial disease to have
the choice of whether to use pronuclear transfer to try and have
healthy children.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Janet Lawrence)
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