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Human Germline and Heritable Genome Editing: The Global Policy Landscape

Françoise Βaylis, Marcy Darnovsky, Katie Hasson, Timothy Krahn

2020The CRISPR Journal145 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Discussions and debates about the governance of human germline and heritable genome editing should be informed by a clear and accurate understanding of the global policy landscape. This policy survey of 106 countries yields significant new data. A large majority of countries (96 out of 106) surveyed have policy documents—legislation, regulations, guidelines, codes, and international treaties—relevant to the use of genome editing to modify early-stage human embryos, gametes, or their precursor cells. Most of these 96 countries do not have policies that specifically address the use of genetically modified in vitro embryos in laboratory research (germline genome editing); of those that do, 23 prohibit this research and 11 explicitly permit it. Seventy-five of the 96 countries prohibit the use of genetically modified in vitro embryos to initiate a pregnancy (heritable genome editing). Five of these 75 countries provide exceptions to their prohibitions. No country explicitly permits heritable human genome editing. These data contrast markedly with previously reported findings.

Topics & Concepts

GermlineGenome editingGenomeBiologyLegislationHuman genomeGeneticsHuman geneticsPolitical scienceEvolutionary biologyComputational biologyGeneLawCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringInnovation and Socioeconomic DevelopmentAnimal Genetics and Reproduction
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