Literature DB >> 31021238

Is Enhancement the Price of Prevention in Human Gene Editing?

Eric T Juengst1,2,3, Gail E Henderson1, Rebecca L Walker1, John M Conley4, Douglas MacKay5, Karen M Meagher6, Katherine Saylor5, Margaret Waltz1, Kristine J Kuczynski1, R Jean Cadigan1.   

Abstract

New gene-editing tools challenge conventional policy proscriptions of research aimed at either human germline gene editing or human enhancement by potentially lowering technical barriers to both kinds of intervention. Some recent gene-editing reports have begun to take up the prospect of germline editing, but most experts are in broad agreement that research should prioritize medical applications over attempts to enhance human traits. However, there is little consensus about what counts as human enhancement in this context, or how to deal with the issues it flags. Moreover, several influential reports interpret medical applications to include disease prevention as well as treatment as a goal for gene-editing research. This challenges the current policy consensus because using gene editing to prevent disease would incidentally facilitate human enhancement applications in a variety of ways. If such research efforts are penalized by policy concerns about enhancement, then their preventive health benefits could be lost. To avoid being caught off guard by such challenges, science policy makers will need to think more carefully about what "prevention" might mean in the gene-editing context, and develop research governance that can anticipate and address the human enhancement concerns it will raise. To accomplish the latter, the scope of policy making will need to expand from its narrow focus on human clinical trials to engage with basic researchers driving the translational pipeline toward preventive gene editing and the science policy makers who have to address its "off-label" uses.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 31021238      PMCID: PMC6636863          DOI: 10.1089/crispr.2018.0040

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  CRISPR J        ISSN: 2573-1599


  5 in total

1.  The View from the Benches: Scientists' Perspectives on the Uses and Governance of Human Gene-Editing Research.

Authors:  Margaret Waltz; Eric T Juengst; Teresa Edwards; Gail E Henderson; Kristine J Kuczynski; John M Conley; Paige Della-Penna; R Jean Cadigan
Journal:  CRISPR J       Date:  2021-08

2.  Toward Anticipatory Governance of Human Genome Editing: A Critical Review of Scholarly Governance Discourse.

Authors:  John P Nelson; Cynthia L Selin; Christopher T Scott
Journal:  J Responsible Innov       Date:  2021-07-29

Review 3.  Responsible Translational Pathways for Germline Gene Editing?

Authors:  Bryan Cwik
Journal:  Curr Stem Cell Rep       Date:  2020-08-21

Review 4.  Human germline genome editing is illegal in Canada, but could it be desirable for some members of the rare disease community?

Authors:  Erika Kleiderman; Ian Norris Kellner Stedman
Journal:  J Community Genet       Date:  2019-08-16

5.  The 'serious' factor in germline modification.

Authors:  Erika Kleiderman; Vardit Ravitsky; Bartha Maria Knoppers
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2019-07-20       Impact factor: 2.903

  5 in total

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