Abstract

Human gene editing, particularly using the new CRISPR/Cas9 technology, will greatly increase the capability to make precise changes to human genomes. Human gene editing can be broken into four major categories: somatic therapy, heritable gene editing, genetic enhancement, and basic and applied research. Somatic therapy is generally well governed by national regulatory systems, so the need for global governance is less urgent. All nations are in agreement that heritable gene editing should not proceed at this time, but there is likely to be divergence if and when such procedures are shown to be safe and effective. Gene editing for enhancement purposes is not feasible today but is more controversial with the public, and many nations do not have well-developed regulatory systems for addressing genetic enhancement. Finally, different nations treat research with human embryos very differently based on deeply embedded social, cultural, ethical, and legal traditions. Several international governance mechanisms are currently in operation for human gene editing, and several other governance mechanisms have been proposed. It is unlikely that any single mechanism will alone be effective for governing human gene editing; rather, a polycentric or ecosystem approach that includes several overlapping and interacting components is likely to be necessary.

Highlights

  • Genome editing is already being applied across a variety of domains, including human health, animal and plant breeding, environmental applications, and basic biomedical research, with much greater use of gene editing projected across each of these domains in the future (18)

  • This review focuses on human genome editing, and in particular current efforts and proposed future strategies for the global governance of this technology

  • This review begins with a brief description of genome editing technology and its existing and potential applications to humans, and identifies safety and ethical concerns raised by different types of human genome editing and how those concerns are being addressed by national regulatory bodies around the world

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Genome editing is already being applied across a variety of domains, including human health, animal and plant breeding, environmental applications, and basic biomedical research, with much greater use of gene editing projected across each of these domains in the future (18). This review focuses on human genome editing, and in particular current efforts and proposed future strategies for the global governance of this technology. This review begins with a brief description of genome editing technology and its existing and potential applications to humans, and identifies safety and ethical concerns raised by different types of human genome editing and how those concerns are being addressed by national regulatory bodies around the world. It focuses on global governance, addressing three questions: What are the arguments for and against global governance of human genome editing? It focuses on global governance, addressing three questions: What are the arguments for and against global governance of human genome editing? What mechanisms of international governance of human genome editing currently exist? And what additional mechanisms of international governance have been proposed or may be needed?

OVERVIEW OF HUMAN GENOME EDITING
Somatic Genome Editing
Heritable Genome Editing
Enhancement
Basic and Applied Research
INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE
International Governance
Existing International Governance Approaches
Proposed International Governance Approaches
CONCLUSION
DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
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