Title: Ethical Issues in Genetics
1Ethical Issues in Genetics
- David T. Rubin, M.D.
- February 2007
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3Nature 171, 737-738 (1953) Molecular structure
of Nucleic Acids WATSON, J. D. CRICK, F. H.
C. Medical Research Council Unit for the Study of
Molecular Structure of Biological Systems,
Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge. A Structure for
Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid
- We wish to suggest a structure for the salt of
deoxyribose nucleic acid (D.N.A.). This structure
has novel features which are of considerable
biological interest.
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5Genetic Testing / Genetic Information
- Genetic testing can be done on a small amount of
blood or on cells swabbed from inside your cheek.
- Genetic testing may test for the presence/absence
or concentration of certain proteins or
metabolites in your blood sample, or it may
require the analysis of your genetic material
(DNA or chromosomes). - While these tests may not be physically risky,
they require strict scrutiny because of the type
of information they may reveal.
6Genetic Testing vs Gene Therapy
- Genetic testing can be performed on healthy
individuals, at-risk individuals, or
symptomatic individuals. It can also be
performed on embryos pre-implantation or the
in-utero fetus. - Our ability to test is much further advanced than
our ability to treat.
7The Range of Genetic Information
- Diagnostic genetic testing
- Predictive genetic testing
- Genetic testing for reproductive risk factors.
8Diagnostic Genetic Testing
- Newborn screening for early-onset treatable
conditions (e.g., PKU). - Clinical diagnostic role
- Congenital malformations
- Symptomatic individual
- Pharmacogenetics ability to test whether a drug
is effective for a particular individual or
whether an individual can tolerate certain drugs
at particular levels.
9Predictive Genetic Testing
- Pre-symptomatic testing genetic testing for a
gene which confers virtual certainty of disease. - Classic example Huntington Disease (single gene
disorder) - Pre-dispositional testing genetic testing to
determine if an individual is at higher risk than
the general population for developing a disease. - Single gene disorder Women with BRCA-1 gene
have up to an 85 likelihood of developing breast
cancer by age 70 years compared to an 11 chance
in the general population. - Multi-gene disorders Whether individuals have
genes that increase or decrease the likelihood of
a multifactorial condition (e.g., cardiac
disease).
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11Why Predictive Genetic Testing is not Necessarily
Predictive Even in Single Gene Disorders
(Genetics as Weatherman)
- PENETRANCE the percentage of individuals with
the mutant gene who develop the disease. The
penetrance of genes can vary from 30 to 100. - EXPRESSIVITY the marked variation in clinical
features manifested by the same gene, even the
same mutation, even within the same family.
12Reproductive Use of Genetic Information
- Premarital Counseling and Testing
- Pre-conception Counseling and Testing
- Prenatal Counseling and Testing
- Pre-implantation Genetic Diagnosis (PGD)
13Complex Genetic Disorder
- Multiple gene sequences
- Non-Mendelian inheritance (incomplete penetrance)
- Mistakes may increase disease susceptibility
- Same genotype results in different phenotype
- Same phenotype results from different genotype
14Gene-Environment Interaction
Genetic Susceptibility
High
Risk of Disease
Medium
Low
Environmental exposure
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16Genetic Predisposition Testing Is a Multi-Step
Process
17To Test or Not to TestWhat are the Questions?
Jonsen, Siegler, Winslade. Clinical Ethics, 4th
ed. 1998.
18To Test or Not to TestWhat are the Questions?
19Dirk brings his family tree to class.
20Verbal history
Cancer NOS 40s
Ovarian 46
Ovarian 42 Breast 64
Breast 60
Lung 40s
34
Ovarian 37
21When Should Genetic Testing Be Considered?
Physician Factors
- Education
- When to test
- Who to test
- How to test counseling, informed consent
(when?) - Will results influence medical management- of my
patient or their family? - Need to couple studies of accuracy of predictive
testing with intervention. - Long lag time
- Balance risks/benefits of the intervention vs.
disease - Correct interpretation of results
22Use and interpretation of commercial APC gene
testing for familial adenomatous polyposis
- Patients tested N177
- Clinical features of FAP/at risk for the disease
83.0 - Appropriate strategy for presymptomatic testing
79.4 (50 of 63 patients). - Genetic counseling before the test 18.6 (33 of
177) - Written informed consent 16.9 (28 of 166)
- Physicians misinterpreted the test results 31.6
Giardiello, et al. N Engl J Med. 1997 Mar
20336(12)823-7.
23To Test or Not to TestWhat are the Questions?
24Some Factors That Influence Risk Perception
- Family experience with disease
- Personality traits
- Disease perception
- Family relationships
- Educational level
- Cultural, social, and religious factors
25Informed Consent for Genetic Testing
- Information on specific test being performed
- Implications of / -
- Possibility of uninformative results
- Options for risk estimation without genetic
testing - Risk of passing on mutation
- Technical accuracy of test
- Fees involved in testing and counseling
- Risks of psychological distress
- Risks of discrimination
- Confidentiality issues
- Options and limitations of medical surveillance
and screening
ASCO (1996) Statement of the American Society
of Clinical Oncology Genetic testing for cancer
susceptibility. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 14
(5) 1730-1736.
26Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients Interest in
Genetic Testing
Survey of 115 IBD patients at the University of
Chicago
Konda et al, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, 2006.
27Patient Interest In Genetic Testing For Adult
Family Members
28To Test or Not to TestWhat are the Questions?
29Psychological Implications
- Benefits
- Removal of uncertainty and doubt
- Permits earlier detection and interventions
- Provides explanation for disease
- Helpful information for family
- Able to plan/be emotionally prepared for future
- Reduces cost of care
- Spares increased surveillance if negative result
(truly negative) - Opportunity for participation in cancer control
research
- Risks
- Increased anxiety, depression, anger
- Survivor/transmission guilt
- Family relationship disruption
- Worry about children and their future
- Stigmatization
- Insurance/employment discrimination
- Uncertainty with ambiguous results
- False sense of security with negative results
- Interference with work, school, life goals
Lessisk et al. (2001) Advances in genetic testing
for cancer risk. Med Surg Nursing, 10 (3)
123-127.
30To Test or Not to TestWhat are the Questions?
31Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA)
- Does
- State that genetic information cannot be used to
determine eligibility - Prevent insurers from charging different
individual premiums within a group plan - State that genetic information cannot be viewed
as a preexisting condition (in the absence of a
diagnosis of the condition related to such
information)
32Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA)
- Does not
- Prevent access by insurers to genetic information
- Prevent the insurer from demanding genetic
testing as a condition of coverage - Protect against group rate hikes
- Provide much protection outside the group market
33Genetic Discrimination Legislation by State and
Type
H health insurance legislation D disability
insurance legislation L life insurance
legislation E employment legislation P
privacy legislation
minimal protection ltd. to group
disability very ltd. From
www.gene-watch.org
de Tar, L., Nedelcu, R.
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35 A Case-Based Approach
36Case 1 Huntington Disease (HD)
- Autosomal dominant form of dementia (progressive
cognitive disability) with onset in mid-life.
Autosomal dominant means if your parent has it,
you have a 50 chance of being affected. - Virtually 100 penetrant (meaning if you have the
gene, you WILL get the disease). - Frequently there is earlier onset in later
generations (anticipation).
37The hereditary chorea, as I shall call it, is
confined to certain and fortunately few families,
and has been transmitted to them, an heirloom
from generation away back in the dim past. It is
spoken of by those in whose veins the seeds of
the disease are known to exist, with a kind of
horror, and not at all allude to except through
dire necessity when it is mentioned as "that
disorder."Â -- Huntington, 1872
38Case 1 Huntington Disease (HD)
- What are the risks and benefits of testing once
symptoms develop? - What are the risks and benefits of testing
pre-symptomatically? - Do I have the right to be tested if my twin
sister does not want to know her risk status? - Do I have the right to be tested if my maternal
grandmother was affected but my mother does not
want to know her status? - Do I have the right NOT to be tested if I am
planning to have children?
39Case 2 BRCA-1 Testing
- Women who carry the BRCA-1 gene have an increased
risk of breast cancer at a young age. Depending
on ethnicity and family history, the risk may be
as high as 85 by age 70 years. - Much data about risks in the Ashkenazi Jewish
community. - Although the gene is autosomal dominant (you only
need one abnormal gene to get the disease), it is
not completely penetrant. - In comparison, in the general population, 1-in-9
women get breast cancer.
40Case 2 BRCA-1 Testing
- What are the risks and benefits of testing for an
individual? for a community? (BRCA-1 has a
higher incidence in the Ashkenazi Jewish
community) - How does genetic testing for HD differ from
genetic testing for BRCA-1? - Because there are multiple mutations of the
BRCA-1 gene, breast cancer risk determination
often requires that an affected family member
provide genetic material. Do family members have
an obligation to do so?
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42Case 3 FAP Testing
- Familial Adenomatous Polyposis is an autosomal
dominant syndrome characterized by - 100 risk of colon cancer by age 45
- Extra-colonic tumors of brain, pancreas,
duodenum, bone, thyroid, skin - 1/11000 individuals have the disorder, and 1/3 of
mutations are de novo - Genetic testing is available and sequencing of
the APC gene accurate. - Once the mutation is identified in a proband, it
easy to test other family members for the
specific mutation - In the absence of testing, the phenotype of the
disease can be easily detected by looking in the
rectum and sigmoid colon
43Familial Adenomatous Polyposis
44APC Gene on Chromosome 5
0
2843
1500
? amino acids ?
AAPC
AAPC
CLASSIC POLYPOSIS
CHRPE
GARDNER
Modified from Kinzler and Vogelstein, 1998.
45Case 3 FAP Testing
- Your patient is diagnosed with FAP by phenotype,
and subsequent genetic testing identifies the
mutation in chromosome 5 - As part of your counseling, you recommend testing
first-degree family members - She agrees to notify her brother of the mutation
and his risk, but informs you that she has an
estranged sister and has no interest in notifying
her.
46Case 3 FAP Testing
- What should you do?
- Do you have a duty to warn her sister?
47Duty to Warn?
- Tarasoff v. Regents of the University of
California (1976) - Duty to warn if there is an imminent risk of
direct and serious danger to another - Do genetic findings reach the level of prediction
necessary? - Siblings have a 50 risk
- There is NO legal duty to rescue. The proband
does not cause the risk to the sibling the risk
exists regardless. - Proband may cause the risk to his/her child.
48Duty to Warn? Duty to Rescue?
- Pate v Threkel, Florida, 1995
- Woman diagnosed with medullary thyroid cancer.
Her daughter sues the physician for not warning
her that she too might be at risk. - Court Doctor did not have a duty to the
daughter. Had a duty to inform the woman (his
patient) that her children could be at risk. - Safer v Estate of Pack, NJ, 1996.
- Physician treats a male patient for CRC. 26
years after the man has died, his daughter learns
that she has multiple polyps and cancer. She
sues the doctor. - Trial Court No doctor-patient relationship
Genetic disease not like infectious disease
the harm is already present within the
non-patient child as opposed to being introduced
by a patient. - Appellate Court There can be a duty to warn.
Doctor had obligation to the daughter.
49Case 3 FAP Testing
- She notifies her brother, and he comes to see
you. - After hearing about this disease, he states that
he would rather not be tested, and would like
nature to take its course. - He has two children, ages 10 and 14.
- Does the fact that he has children change your
approach to this individual?
50What is a Stem Cell?
- Stem cells are cells that have the ability to
generate or renew tissues in the human organism.
They are the precursors that develop into various
cell types, which are the basis for human organs
and tissues. - Stem cells are found in all stages of the
developing embryo and in the adult human (in
various organs in all three layers of cells).
51Sources of Human Stem Cells
- Procurement from human tissue (e.g., bone marrow
aspiration) (Adult Stem Cells AS). - Umbilical Cord Blood Stem Cells (UC) are
collected at birth. - Human fetal tissue following abortion or
miscarriage (Embryonic Germ Stem Cells EG). - Embryos created by IVF no longer needed by the
couple (Embryonic Stem Cells ES). - Embryos created by IVF expressly for research
purposes (Embryonic Stem Cells ES). - Embryos resulting from somatic cell nuclear
transfer (SCNT) or other cloning techniques
into a human ovum (Embryonic Stem Cells ES).
52Procuring Stem Cells
UMBILICAL CORD STEM CELLS
ADULT STEM CELLS
53Procuring Embryonic Stem Cells (ES)
54Procuring Embryonic Germ Stem Cells (EG)
55CREATING EMBRYONIC STEM CELLS (ES) via SOMATIC
CELL NUCLEAR TRANSFER (SCNT)
N.B. SNCT is also known as Therapeutic Cloning.
If the blastocyst were to be implanted, it would
result in Reproductive Cloning.
56Why does the source of the stem cell matter?
- Adult Stem Cells
- AS are rare often difficult to identify,
isolate, and purify. - No confirmed data that AS are pluripotent,
although do have some plasticity. - AS create an immune response when transplanted.
- AS cannot proliferate ex vivo for a long period
of time.
- Embryonic Stem Cells
- ES are ubiquitous in embryos, but their
procurement creates a moral debate. - ES are pluripotent.
- ES are immunologically tolerated by others.
- ES can undergo many replications ex vivo.
57What is the therapeutic potential of stem cells?
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59What are the Ethical and Policy Controversies
Surrounding Embryonic Stem Cell Research?
60The Real Moral Issue
- What does it mean to be human?
- Are we talking about a fertilized egg or a
zygote or an embryo or a fetus or a child-to-be? - What is the moral status of a fertilized egg or
a zygote or an embryo or a fetus or a child-to-be?
61What is the moral status of an embryo?
- Embryos are human beings and deserve full moral
standing. - Embryos are just a clump of human cells.
- Embryos are potential human persons and must be
treated with respect, but do not have full moral
standing.
62Why the moral status matters
- If one believes that embryos are human beings and
deserve full moral standing, then stem cell
research should be prohibited. - Moral arguments
- The use of ES is intrinsically unethical.
- The use of ES, even if within our moral rights as
a community, may have the negative untoward
effect of diminishing respect for humanity. - The Slippery Slope From therapeutic cloning to
reproductive cloning - Pragmatic arguments
- Adult stem cells currently show a lot more
promise than originally thought. We can do AS
research without offending anyones morality.
63Why the moral status matters
- If one believes that embryos are potential human
persons and must be treated with respect, but do
not have full moral standing, then one would
permit a more liberal policy. - Moral argument
- We can do it while respecting the embryo as human
material, albeit not as a moral agent. - Pragmatic arguments
- We will advance science most quickly.
- Even if we dont allow this research to be done
here in the U.S., the research will continue. A
reverse brain drain? - If we are going to let this research be done,
then it is better to have it in the public sector
where there is greater oversight and greater
transparency than leaving it to the private
sector.
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65Concluding Remarks
- Genetics is forcing us to reconsider our medical
ethics paradigm which places exclusive focus on
the doctor-patient relationship in isolation from
the wider community in which this relationship
occurs. - We are all members of many communities which
sometimes have conflicting interests and needs. - Not everyone wants to know their genetic make-up
knowledge may be power but it also may cause
fear, stigmatization, and/or discrimination. - Although individuals have final authority about
when and whether to be tested, individuals ought
to consider the impact of their decisions on
various third parties.