Ethics and Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

What is genetic exceptionalism?

A

The belief that genetic information is special and must therefore be treated differently from other types of medical information.

Due to the fact that this information:

  • Is predictive
  • Has implications beyond the individual
  • Can uniquely identify an individual
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2
Q

What is the association between genetics and race?

A
  • Many diseases/alleles are ethnically specific
  • “Racial profiling” can now be done using Principal Component Analysis (PCA).
  • Can be used to justify rights/claims as an American Indian (scholarships, casino rights)
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3
Q

What does the New York Civil Rights Law say regarding genetic testing?

A
  • Researchers cannot perform a genetic test on a biological sample taken from an individual without prior written informed consent.
  • The information cannot be disclosed without written informed consent of the person
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4
Q

What is genetic discrimination?

A

Discrimination against an individual or members of their family soley because of real or perceived genetic differences.

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5
Q

What forms of genetic discrimination are covered by law?

A

Health insurance and employment.

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6
Q

What is GINA?

A

The Genetic Information Non-Discriminatory Act.

Protects against genetic discrimination for health insurance and employment.

Note: Employment provisions do not apply to employers with fewer than 15 employees!

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7
Q

What are some of the reasons people have been denied life insurance based off positive genetic tests?

A
  • Long QT (USA)
  • Breast cancer genes (USA)
  • Tuberous sclerosis (UK)
  • Cardiomyopathy (UK)
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8
Q

What has been on the rise as a result of patients’ need for genetic privacy?

A

Direct-to-consumer marketing (DNA Direct, Pathway Genomics, Counsyl).

Patients often will apply for these under a pseudonym.

Problem is that patients may not always understand information properly, is not provided to their PCP.

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9
Q

What does the physician’s duty to warn entail?

A
  • Must inform patient of genetic component of disease and risk to family.
  • Must document in note that patient was informed.
  • Thus, the physician has the duty to inform the patient, NOT the patient’s family.
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10
Q

What is gene patenting and what are the current laws on this practice?

A

The controversial legal practice of patenting a newly discovered gene. It allows unique segments of DNA, which perhaps code for a certain disease or a certain protein, to be owned by an individual or corporation.

The US Supreme Court ruled (2013) that DNA cannot be patented, although cDNA can.

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11
Q

What are the problems with gene patent monopolies?

A
  • High price
  • Little incentive to improve test
  • Slow turn-around times
  • No means of independent confirmation
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12
Q

What are the ACMG Guidelines for clinical exome sequencing?

A

57 genes - which have effective medical treatment - require mandatory reporting to a clinician, regardless of patient age

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