WHO
panel calls for registry of all human gene editing
research
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[March 20, 2019]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - It would be
irresponsible for any scientist to conduct human gene-editing studies in
people, and a central registry of research plans should be set up to
ensure transparency, World Health Organization experts said on Tuesday.
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After its first two-day meeting in Geneva, the WHO panel of gene
editing experts - which was established in December after a Chinese
scientist said he had edited the genes of twin babies - said it had
agreed a framework for setting future standards.
It said a central registry of all human genome editing research was
needed "in order to create an open and transparent database of
ongoing work", and asked the WHO to start setting up such a registry
immediately.
"The committee will develop essential tools and guidance for all
those working on this new technology to ensure maximum benefit and
minimal risk to human health," Soumya Swamanathan, the WHO's chief
scientist, said in a statement.
A Chinese scientist last year claimed to have edited the genes of
twin baby girls.
News of the births prompted global condemnation, in part because it
raised the ethical specter of so-called "designer babies" - in which
embryos can be genetically modified to produce children with
desirable traits.
Top scientists and ethicists from seven countries called last week
for a global moratorium on gene editing of human eggs, sperm or
embryos that would result in such genetically-altered babies -
saying this "could have permanent and possibly harmful effects on
the species".
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The WHO panel's statement said any human gene editing work should be
done for research only, should not be done in human clinical trials,
and should be conducted transparently.
"It is irresponsible at this time for anyone to proceed with
clinical applications of human germline genome editing."
The WHO's director-general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, welcomed the
panel's initial plans. "Gene editing holds incredible promise for
health, but it also poses some risks, both ethically and medically,"
he said in a statement.
The committee said it aims over the next two years to produce "a
comprehensive governance framework" for national, local and
international authorities to ensure human genome editing science
progresses within agreed ethical boundaries.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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