A promising way to stop a deadly disease, or an uncomfortable step toward what one leading ethicist called eugenics?
U.S. health officials are
weighing whether to approve trials of a pioneering in vitro
fertilization technique using DNA from three people in an attempt to
prevent illnesses like muscular dystrophy and respiratory problems. The
proposed treatment would allow a woman to have a baby without passing on
diseases of the mitochondria, the "powerhouses" that drive cells.
The procedure is "not
without its risks, but it's treating a disease," medical ethicist Art
Caplan told CNN's "New Day" on Wednesday. Preventing a disease that can
be passed down for generations would be ethical "as long as it proves to
be safe," he said.
"These little embryos,
these are people born with a disease, they can't make power. You're
giving them a new battery. That's a therapy. I think that's a humane
ethical thing to do," said Caplan, the director of medical ethics at New
York University's Langone Medical Center.
"Where we get into the
sticky part is, what if you get past transplanting batteries and start
to say, 'While we're at it, why don't we make you taller, stronger,
faster or smarter?' "
But Susan Solomon, the director of the New York Stem Cell Foundation, said there are no changes to existing genes involved.
"There is no genetic
engineering. It isn't a slippery slope. It's a way to allow these
families to have healthy children," said Solomon, whose organization
developed the technique along with Columbia University researchers.
"What we're doing is,
without at all changing the DNA of the mother, just allowing it to grow
in an environment that isn't sick," she added.
The new embryo will
contain nuclear DNA from the intended father and mother, as well as
healthy mitochondrial DNA from the donor embryo -- effectively creating a
"three-parent" baby.
In June, Britain took a step toward becoming the first country to allow the technique.
One in 6,500 babies in the United Kingdom is born with a mitochondrial
disorder, which can lead to serious health issues such as heart and
liver disease.
Caplan said the same
technology could be used to modify an embryo to "making super babies," a
practice he said amounted to "eugenics."
"The big issue over the
next 5 to 10 years is going to become how far do we go in pursuit of the
perfect baby," said Caplan. "Do I think we're going down that road?
Yes. Does it creep me out? Yes. Are you going to be able to draw a clear
line? I don't think so."
But Solomon said the
procedure is closer to an expansion of in vitro fertilization, which has
been available for nearly 40 years.
"It's a complicated
science, so people need to understand the particulars of the biology and
not jump to calling it something it isn't," she said. The last thing
she would want, she said, "is for the New York Stem Cell Foundation to
be involved in anything like designer babies."
"I have children and grandchildren, and I can't imagine anything worse."
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