Mitochondrial donation becomes legal in Australia
Michaela Chen, Progress Educational Trust
26 April 2022

[BioNews, London]

The Australian Senate has passed a bill which will legalise the clinical use mitochondrial donation by a vote of 37 votes for to 17 against.

The bill, known as Maeve's law, had previously passed in the Australian House of Representativesx with 92 votes for and 29 against, in Australia's first conscience vote since the same-sex marriage vote in 2017. Maeve's law is named after five-year-old Maeve Hood, who was born with Leigh syndrome, a severe mitochondrial disorder diagnosed when she was 18 months old.

Federal health minister Greg Hunt, who supported the bill, said: 'It is globally leading mitochondrial legislation to give hope to families across Australia'.

Mitochondria, organelles that produce energy for cells, are passed on to offspring via the mitochondria in the egg cell. Approximately 50 children per year are born in Australia with a severe form of mitochondrial disease, with a life expectancy of about five years.

Mitochondrial disease results when a harmful mutation in the mitochondrial DNA is passed on from mother to child. The faulty mitochondria then fail to produce enough energy for cells.

'Mitochondrial diseases impact on at least one child born in Australia each week and lack effective treatments' said Professor David Thorburn, the co-group leader of brain and mitochondrial research at the Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia, who also welcomed the decision. 'Affected patients typically suffer severe disease affecting their brain, heart or other organ systems and early death, ranging from infancy to middle age.'

However, other experts have called for caution, with some arguing the decision to legalise the technology is premature.

'If it is safe and there are no side effects, then I would be happy for it to be implemented, but until we are absolutely sure, then I have big reservations about its use,' said Professor Jus St John, a mitochondrial genetics researcher at the University of Adelaide, Australia, whose research lab is currently trying to determine how safe mitochondrial donation is. 'We do not have sufficient data from large animal models.'

Some senators echoed these concerns in a debate which included discussions of potential amendments to the bill. Proposed amendments included the removal of a technique which would destroy a fertilised egg, and the removal of immunity from civil actions. However, all amendments were voted down, meaning that the bill can become law without being sent back to Parliament.

Professor Thorburn argued that the bill will protect against misuse of the technology: 'The regulatory environment has safeguards that will ensure it can only be used for the intended purpose and the reforms are consistent with international standards and best practice.'

SOURCES & REFERENCES

Controversial IVF bill passed after conscience vote
The Sydney Morning Herald |  30 March 2022
DNA donation law passes parliament
The Senior |  30 March 2022
'Maeve's Law' passes Senate hurdle to legalising mitochondrial donation through IVF
ABC News |  30 March 2022
Mitochondrial Donation Law Reform (Maeve's Law) Bill 2021
Parliament of Australia |  30 March 2022





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Reproduced from BioNews with permission, a web- and email-based source of news, information and comment on assisted reproduction and human genetics, published by Progress Educational Trust.


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