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e.    the ethical acceptability of the proposal; and

                                         f.     the informed consent documents.

                                 In the light of this assessment the expert supervisory body should
                                 make  a  recommendation  on  whether  the  proposal  should  be
                                 approved, and if so on what, if any, conditions.

                                 The supervisory body should also have a responsibility for:

                                 vi.     acting  in  co-ordination  with  existing  Research  Ethics
                                         Committees;

                                 vii.    acting  as  a  repository  of  up-to-date  information  on
                                         research in gene therapy internationally;

                                 viii.   setting  up  and  maintaining  a  confidential  register  of
                                         patients who have been the subjects of gene therapy;

                                 ix.     oversight and monitoring of the research; and

                                 x.      providing advice to Appropriate authority, on     scientific
                                         and medical developments which bear on  the      safety   and
                                         efficacy of human gene modification.

                          It is recommended that any proposal for gene therapy be approved by this
                          body as well as by NREC.

                          13.9  Stem Cell Research

                          Human  embryonic  stem  cell  (HESC)  research  offers  much  hope  for
                          alleviating the human suffering brought on by the ravages of disease and
                          injury.  HESCs  are  characterized  by  their  capacity  for  self-renewal  and
                          their  ability  to  differentiate  into  all  types  of  cells  of  the  body.  The  main
                          goal  of  HESC  research  is  to  identify  the  mechanisms  that  govern  cell
                          differentiation and to turn HESCs into specific cell types that can be used
                          for treating debilitating and life-threatening diseases and injuries.

                          Scientists  recently  succeeded  in  converting  adult  human  skin  cells  into
                          cells that appear to have the properties of HESCs by activating four genes
                          in  the  adult  cells.    The  reprogrammed  cells  -  “induced  pluripotent  stem
                          cells” (iPSCs) - could ultimately eliminate the need for HESCs. However,
                          at present, the consensus in the scientific community is that both HESC
                          and  iPSC  research  should  be  pursued,  as  we  do  not  yet  know  whether
                          iPSCs  have  the  same  potential  as  HESCs  or  whether  it  is  safe  to
                          transplant  them  into  humans.  Thus,  the  controversies  around  HESC
                          research will continue, at least in the near-term.

                          While the principal source of the controversy surrounding HESC research
                          lies in competing views about the value of human embryonic life, the scope
                          of  ethical  issues  in  HESC  research  is  broader  than  the  question  of  the
                          ethics of destroying human embryos. It also encompasses questions about,
                          among  other  things,  whether  researchers  who  use  but  do  not  derive



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