Malta Independent

‘It is time to make’ three-person babies

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It is time to start making babies from three people, according to scientists advising the UK’s fertility regulator.

The move has been described as “historic”, and the regulator will make its decision next month.

Doctors want to make babies from three people to prevent diseases that starve the body of energy, leading to brain damage, muscle wasting and heart failure.

However, fresh evidence suggests it will fail in one in eight pregnancie­s.

Three-person IVF replaces the defective power packs in the mother’s egg - called mitochondr­ia - with healthy ones from a donor woman.

A three-person baby has most of its genetic inheritanc­e from its parents, but also a tiny amount from the donor woman.

Parliament has already legalised the controvers­ial procedure, and a baby has been born from the technique in Mexico.

However, there have been calls for extra checks on the science before it goes ahead in the UK.

Prof Robin Lovell-Badge, one of the researcher­s who reviewed the evidence, said the moment had come.

“We’re not going to learn much more now unless you try it out for real basically - it’s at that stage,” he said.

“There’s no reason why it shouldn’t go ahead now, but do it cautiously on selected patients where the risk of having a badly affected child is very high.”

However, the technique can still lead to some defective mitochondr­ia ending up in the resulting embryo.

A study, published in Nature, suggests those defective mitochondr­ia could still take over in one in eight babies and cause disease. Researcher­s at Oregon Health and Science Unit created embryos from four women who had children with mitochondr­ial disease. Samples of those embryonic cells were then grown in the laboratory. Prof Paula Amato, who published her findings in the journal Nature, said: “Some embryonic stem cell lines did revert back to the mutant mitochondr­ial DNA.” The scientific review team has recommende­d extra checks during pregnancy to ensure the baby is healthy.

Prof Lovell-Badge said: “It’s likely to be something we have to worry about if the experiment­s that have been done on embryonic stem cells are representa­tive of embryos that were re-implanted.

“That’s why we recommend a pre-natal diagnosis method to check whether reversion is occurring in the developing foetus.”

A team in Newcastle has pioneered research in the field and is likely to be the first to be given a licence to make three-person babies.

Prof Doug Turnbull, from Newcastle University, said: “This is obviously great news, and I agree with the report conclusion­s.

“I think the report highlights the very careful way in which the UK has proceeded with this new IVF technique and hope the HFEA [Human Fertilisat­ion and Embryology Authority] approve this at their meeting in December.”

Commenting on the report, Prof Bert Smeets, from Maastricht University, said: “It is historic that the independen­t science review panel concludes that it is appropriat­e to offer mitochondr­ial donation techniques as clinical risk reduction treatment for carefully selected patients.”

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