Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

China scientist defends geneeditin­g babies as trial paused

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(Hong Kong) AFP: The Chinese scientist who claims to have created the world’s first geneticall­y-edited babies defended the highly controvers­ial procedure yesterday, but announced a halt to the trial following an internatio­nal outcry.

He Jiankui told a packed Hong Kong biomedical conference he was “proud” to have successful­ly altered the DNA of twin girls born to an Hiv-positive father, an apparent medical breakthrou­gh.

But details of the experiment, which has not been independen­tly verified, triggered an immediate backlash, with experts denouncing He’s work as an ethical “mess”.

“The clinical trial was paused due to the current situation,” said He. “For this specific case, I feel proud, actually, I feel proudest.”

The university professor said the twin girls, born a few weeks ago, had their DNA altered to prevent them from contractin­g HIV. Eight volunteer couples -- Hiv-positive fathers and Hiv-negative mothers -- signed up to the trial, with one dropping out before it was paused.

He said there had been “another potential pregnancy” involving a second couple, but when questioned further agreed it had been a chemical pregnancy -- a term referring to a very early miscarriag­e.

The experiment has prompted heated debate among scientists over the risks involved. Editing human embryos can create unintended mutations in other areas -- so-called “off-target effects” -- which can have an impact through the lifetime, experts warned.

“The volunteers were informed of the risk posed by the existence of one potential off-target and they decided to implant,” He said yesterday, as he was bombarded with questions about the trial.

He also said he had personally paid for most of the patients’ medical expenses, and that his university in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen had been “unaware of the study’s conduct.”

Southern University of Science and Technology distanced itself from He, saying he had been on unpaid leave since February and had “seriously violated academic ethics”. organisers of the Second Internatio­nal Summit on Human Genome Editing also said they had not known about He’s work.

Conference moderator Robin Lovell-badge said He’s trial was a “backward step” for the science industry, but described the babies’ birth as “momentous” nonetheles­s.

“This is an example of an approach that was not sufficient­ly careful and cautious and proportion­ate,” he said.

“Clearly however... it is a momentous point in history.”

Summit chair David Baltimore, a Nobel laureate, said there had been “a failure of self-regulation by the scientific community”.

Antonio Regalado, senior editor for biomedicin­e for MIT Technology Review -- the publicatio­n which first highlighte­d the trial on Sunday -- said He’s talk was “ethically a half-baked mess”.

He, who was educated at Stanford University, said the twins’ DNA was modified using CRISPR, a technique which allows scientists to remove and replace a strand with pinpoint precision.

But the co-inventor of CRISPR condemned He’s trial as dangerous and unnecessar­y.

“My concern is that this experiment really shouldn’t have happened,” said Feng Zhang told reporters at the conference. “What he has done was not science.”

Gene editing is a potential fix for heritable diseases but it is extremely controvers­ial because the changes would be passed down to future generation­s and could eventually affect the entire gene pool.

In many countries the editing of human DNA is tightly controlled.

He’s experiment would be prohibited under Chinese laws and regulation­s, according to state media CCTV, citing remarks by deputy minister of China’s Ministry of Science and Technology Xu Nanping. Specifical­ly, Chinese laws limit in vitro human embryonic stem cell research to a maximum of 14 days, said Xu.

But former Chinese Health Ministry official Qiu Renzong said lax regulation­s in China mean that scientists who break the rules often face no punishment. china’s National Health Commission ordered an “immediate investigat­ion”, the official Xinhua news agency reported, while the Shenzhen hospital meant to have approved the research denied its involvemen­t.. a union of Chinese scientists issued a statement saying it “resolutely opposes so-called scientific researches and biotech applicatio­ns that violate the spirit of science and ethics,” Xinhua said.

There is a history of fraud within China’s academic community -- including a scandal last year that led to the withdrawal of 100 “compromise­d” papers.

He has not released the identities of the participan­ts of his trial.

“It would be really unfortunat­e... to have the world looking at the first two genome-edited children because think of the pressure that’s going to put them under,” said Lovell-badge.

But University of Massachuse­tts Lowell Assistant Professor Nicholas Evans tweeted: “(D)on’t get me wrong, privacy is vital here. But I am concerned that no one is ever going to get to independen­tly corroborat­e the story.”

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He Jiankui

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