The head of Britain's largest medical research charity called on the Government yesterday to say when it will change the law on fertility treatment to allow the birth of babies with three genetic parents.
Sir Mark Walport, the director of the Wellcome Trust, was responding to a review of the technique known as "three-parent IVF" by the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, which concluded it would be an ethical option for affected families.
"In light of this report, we urge the Government to outline a timetable for considering amendments to legislation to permit use of the techniques if the Human Fertility and Embryology Authority's (HFEA) consultation in the autumn shows public support for this important technology."
The procedure, banned in the UK, is aimed at helping the 6000 British adults who are living with mitochondrial disease - defects in the small structures called mitochondria that surround the cell nucleus.
The disease is inherited but is only passed down the maternal line. One in 6500 children - about 2000 in the UK - is thought to develop a more severe form of the disease, for which there is no cure.