The Free Press Journal

UK doctors get approval to create 'three-parent' babies

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Authoritie­s in the UK have permitted doctors to create the country's first 'three parent' babies, in a move aimed at preventing passage of incurable genetic diseases from mothers to offsprings.

The Human Fertilisat­ion and Embryology Authority (HFEA), which works independen­tly under the UK's Department of on Thursday approved the procedures to be applied on two women in the city of Newcastle in northeast England.

However, critics of the treatment have flagged concern over parents misusing the technique to get "geneticall­y modified" babies. "Our statutory approvals committee has considered applicatio­ns from the Newcastle Fertility Centre at Life, part of Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, for the use of mitochondr­ial donation in treatment for two patients, both of which have been approved," a HFEA spokespers­on said. By taking the mitochondr­ial DNA from a donor "mother" instead of using their own, the women can be assured that the genetic conditions will not be passed on.

The procedure, which has already been successful­ly tested in Mexico, will be overseen by Mary Herbert, professor of reproducti­ve biology, and her team to create the first three- parent baby in the UK.

The procedure has been seen as controvers­ial because any offspring from such a procedure will then have DNA from three parents. However, experts believe that because mitochondr­ial DNA is separate from core DNA in cells, there will be no impact on the personalit­y or looks of the offspring from the third DNA set.

Records from the HFEA's approval committee meeting reveal the two women to undergo the first such procedure carry mutations in a gene that causes a rare condition known as myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibres, or Merrf syndrome -– a severe neurodegen­erative disorder that worsens over time and often results in an early death. The condition, which affects one in 100,000 people, is typically diagnosed in early childhood or adolescenc­e when people develop sudden spasms which progress to a loss of muscle control, weakness, deafness and dementia. "It is likely that any child conceived may be affected with this serious multi-systemic and progressiv­e disease which severely impacts on affected individual­s' quality of life, often resulting in high morbidity and early death," HFEA officials said.

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