Ethical Issues in Medical Genetics

Ethical Issues in Medical Genetics

Ethical Issues in Medical Genetics

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  • Core Ethical Principles (Pillars):
    • Autonomy: Patient's right to self-determination.
    • Beneficence: Acting in the patient's best interest.
    • Non-maleficence: "Primum non nocere" (Do no harm).
    • Justice: Fair allocation of resources; equitable access.
  • Informed Consent in Genetics (Mandatory):
    • Pre-test counseling: Purpose, procedure, risks, benefits, limitations, implications (personal, familial), alternatives, confidentiality.
    • Voluntary participation: Right to refuse or withdraw consent.
    • Post-test counseling: Disclosure of results, interpretation, support, further options.
  • Key Considerations:
    • Confidentiality & Privacy: Strict protection of genetic data.
    • Genetic Discrimination: Potential misuse (employment, insurance).
    • Testing in Minors: Generally for conditions with childhood onset & clear benefit; assent/consent process crucial.
    • Incidental Findings: Policy for disclosure needed.

⭐ ICMR National Ethical Guidelines (2017) mandate documented pre-test and post-test genetic counseling for all diagnostic and predictive genetic tests.

Scales of Justice with Digital Background

Genetic Testing Quandaries - Future Peeks & Frets

  • Core Dilemmas: Balancing autonomy (right to know/not know), beneficence, non-maleficence, justice in genetic information.
  • Prenatal Testing:
    • Ethical tightrope: Fetal well-being vs. parental autonomy.
    • ⚠️ Misuse for sex selection (PCPNDT Act, India).
  • Newborn Screening (NBS):
    • Child's best interest vs. parental consent, especially for treatable conditions.
  • Predictive & Presymptomatic Testing:
    • For adult-onset disorders (e.g., Huntington's): Psychological impact, right not to know; testing minors is contentious.
  • Carrier Screening:
    • Informed reproductive choices vs. potential for social stigmatization.
  • Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) Tests:
    • Accessibility vs. concerns: Test validity, lack of genetic counseling, data privacy.
  • Overarching Issues:
    • Genetic discrimination (employment, insurance).
    • Managing incidental findings.
    • Future: Ethical frameworks for gene editing (e.g., CRISPR).

⭐ > In India, the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (PCPNDT) Act 1994 stringently regulates prenatal diagnostic procedures to curb female feticide.

Ethical, Social, and Cultural Issues in Genetic Services

Genetic Info & Privacy - Secrets in Strands

  • Confidentiality & Privacy: Genetic data is highly sensitive; uphold patient's right to control their information.
  • Informed Consent: Mandatory for testing, research, and data storage. Clearly explain implications, including potential for incidental findings.
  • Discrimination: Protect against misuse in employment/insurance. Uphold anti-discrimination principles (e.g., as reflected in Indian data privacy considerations).
  • Disclosure Dilemmas:
    • Patient: Right to know vs. right not to know.
    • Relatives: Balancing duty to warn (prevent serious harm) against patient confidentiality.
    • Incidental findings: Requires careful pre-test counselling and post-test management protocols.
  • Data Security: Ensure robust protection, anonymization/pseudonymization for stored genetic information, especially in research databases.

⭐ Disclosure to at-risk relatives without explicit patient consent may be ethically considered if: (1) Attempts to elicit patient consent fail, (2) High probability of irreversible or life-threatening harm to the relative, (3) The disclosure is limited to necessary information, (4) There is a reasonable prospect the harm can be averted by disclosure, and (5) The relative is identifiable. This is a rare exception, not a rule.

Advanced Topics & Indian Context - Genes of Tomorrow

  • Gene Therapy & Editing:
    • Somatic (non-heritable) vs. Germline (heritable, ethical concerns ↑).
    • CRISPR-Cas9: Precision gene editing tool; potential & risks.
    • Challenges: Off-target edits, delivery, immunogenicity, high cost.
  • Pharmacogenomics:
    • Tailoring drug therapy to individual genetic makeup.
    • Examples: TPMT testing for azathioprine, HLA-B*5701 for abacavir.
  • Ethical, Legal, Social Implications (ELSI):
    • Genetic discrimination (insurance, employment).
    • Informed consent, privacy, data security (genomic databases).
    • Genetic counseling: Essential for pre/post-test support.
  • Indian Context:
    • PCPNDT Act, 1994: Prohibits sex-selective diagnosis/procedures.
    • ICMR National Ethical Guidelines for Biomedical and Health Research.
    • Genetic diversity & population-specific studies. Ethical Issues in Medical Genetics in India

⭐ The Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (PCPNDT) Act, 1994, is a key Indian legislation aimed at preventing female foeticide and misuse of prenatal diagnostic techniques for sex determination.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Informed consent is paramount for genetic testing and research.
  • Confidentiality of genetic information is crucial, preventing genetic discrimination.
  • Genetic counseling is essential pre- and post-testing for psychosocial support.
  • Prenatal diagnosis presents ethical challenges, including selective termination.
  • Managing incidental findings from genetic tests requires clear ethical guidelines.
  • DTC genetic tests raise concerns: accuracy, interpretation, and lack of counseling.
  • Germline gene editing (e.g., CRISPR) poses significant ethical questions on heritability.
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Practice Questions: Ethical Issues in Medical Genetics

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