Three-parent IVF babies only two years away

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LONDON: A British expert scientific panel gave its backing on Tuesday to potential new 3-way fertility treatments that would for the first time allow genetically modified embryos to be implanted into women.

 

The “three-parent” IVF techniques are designed to help families with particular genetic faults who want to avoid passing on incurable diseases to their children. They could be available for patients in two years, the scientists told reporters at a briefing in London.

 

Known as mitochondrial replacement or transfer, the methods are at the research stage in laboratories in Britain and the US and have never yet been carried out in people anywhere in the world.

 

They are illegal in Britain for now, but the government said last year it was drawing up draft legislation which if passed into law would allow the treatments to go ahead if they proved safe and effective in clinical trials.

 

Mitochondrial replacement involves intervening in the fertilization process to remove faulty mitochondrial DNA, which can cause inherited conditions such as fatal heart problems, liver failure, brain disorders, blindness and muscular dystrophy.

 

The treatment is also known as three-parent in vitro fertilization (IVF), because the offspring would have genes from a mother, a father and from a female donor. Publishing its report on Monday, the British panel said the evidence it had seen so far “does not suggest that these techniques are unsafe” and does suggest they could be “useful for a specific group of patients”.