This article from NYTimes.com 
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I haven't been following the discussion about free markets vs government interference 
very closely so I don't know whether there has been much discussion about the role of 
government vs private business in regard to the sort of thing discussed in this 
article.

Selma

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To Study Disease, Britain Plans a Genetic Census

December 31, 2002
By GWEN KINKEAD 




 

In 2003, Britain plans to undertake the world's most
ambitious study of the origins of disease. 

Looking forward to the day when people will know their
genetic makeups and request a precise picture of their
risks of developing various diseases, the study organizers
plan to assemble a database of medical information about
500,000 Britons, including their DNA. 

The goal, over the next 10 to 20 years, is to sort out the
way that genes and the environment combine to cause common
diseases. 

At least six countries are preparing similar databases, in
essence genetic censuses, or have already established them.
Iceland, the pioneer, has collected medical data and DNA
samples from 80,000 related people to hunt genes that touch
off disease. It will also develop a national database from
patient records in its health care system. 

DNA-based diagnostics and drugs could result from the
effort. 

Britain's will be the largest of the databases proposed by
governments or their private partners. It has the same
goals as Iceland's but with a critical difference: for the
first time, it will try to quantify the roles of genes and
environmental influences like smoking, alcohol, viruses,
pollution, exercise and diet in unrelated people for all
common diseases. Studying a huge selection of diverse
people could make its discoveries applicable worldwide.
Iceland's population, by contrast, is extraordinarily
homogeneous. 

If the $120 million project, called U.K. Biobank, goes
forward, and enough people volunteer for pilot studies, 1.2
million healthy Britons from 45 to 69 will give blood
samples to the Biobank. From their blood, DNA will be
purified and frozen. Ninety percent of the donors will be
white. The rest will roughly reflect Britain's
demographics. 

>From these, 500,000 will be chosen for the project by 2008.


When they sign up, volunteers will get brief health
examinations and will answer 10-page questionnaires about
their socioeconomic and psychological status, reproductive
history, exercise, cellphone use and beverage preferences.
They will note their diets for a week. 

For 10 years, they will be followed through their national
health care records, which will be copied into the Biobank.
The data will be anonymous, but not completely, to allow
for updates by doctors or new questionnaires. By 2014,
40,175 are expected to fall ill with diabetes, heart
disease, stroke or cancer. Another 6,200 are expected to
have Parkinson's, dementia, rheumatoid arthritis or hip
fractures. 

The DNA of these people will be read and compared, and any
normal gene variants, the one-nucleotide differences in DNA
that make one person's biology different from another's,
will be tagged for study. 

"Then you will be able to see patterns: X number have this
sort of genetic makeup and this kind of lifestyle, and Y
has that, and you can start analyzing, if you like, the
nature-nurture, environment-genes secret," said Sir George
Radda, the molecular cardiologist who heads the Medical
Research Council, a sponsor of the Biobank. 

So far, opposition has been muted and polite. But a
significant minority of British doctors oppose the project
as unnecessary and too costly. 

American geneticists are also split on the value of huge
medical and DNA databases. Some argue that existing ones
like the Framingham Heart Study, which is gathering DNA
from descendants of its original subjects, are enough.
Others question their design. 

Dr. David Altshuler, a geneticist at the Whitehead/M.I.T.
Center for Genome Research and Harvard Medical School,
said, "I am not sure that a one-size-fits-all gene bank is
what we want, but it is absolutely necessary to do
prospective population studies if we are going to give any
valuable information to the average patient who walks into
their doctor and says, `Does this genetic discovery I read
about in the paper apply to me?' or `What does it mean if I
have a certain gene variant?' " 

Health officials in the United States are beginning to
discuss a large database for research, said Dr. Lisa
Brooks, a spokeswoman for the National Genome Research
Institute at the National Institutes of Health. Smaller
databases, gathering DNA from volunteers, are being started
by the Mayo Clinic, among others. 

Four years in the making, Biobank is financed by the
government and the pillars of Britain's scientific
establishment - the Wellcome Trust, a $20 billion charity
that dominates biomedical research, and the Medical
Research Council, which awards science grants. Still, it is
creeping to a start because of the ethical issues it poses.


The nation's health secretary, Alan Milburn, calls it a
"flagship project on molecular epidemiology for the new
century." But others are considerably less optimistic. 

Some people worry that they will be exploited and their
privacy invaded. Critics are calling for its suspension,
saying it has yet to answer crucial questions about access
by the courts and pharmaceutical companies and the type of
studies will be allowed. 

"We would like to see it shelved until safeguards are
added," said Dr. Helen Wallace, deputy director of
GeneWatch U.K., a public interest group concerned about
genetic research. The government has rejected GeneWatch's
request for an independent review of Biobank's value. 

Instead, Biobank backers are consulting with ethicists,
doctors, scientists, drug companies and the public before
issuing final plans. This, they hope, will rally Britain
around the plan and prevent the outrage that greeted
Iceland's database and doomed another in Tonga. 

Biobank is to be ready for study in 2014. At the touch of a
few computer keys, international researchers should be able
to tap into its storehouse to see what genetic variants
exist in Britain's population and how Britons' patterns of
everyday life affect their risk for disease. 

The researchers say their project will focus on the way
genes interact with one another and with environmental
influences to alter genetic susceptibility to disease. The
task of searching for disease genes is expected to be
performed by the Iceland project and its rivals. 

Major diseases like heart disease and cancer are well known
to have many causes and to involve cascades of interactions
among many genes. 

Sir George of the Medical Research Council said he hoped
that in several decades doctors would be able to tell a
patient with a particular genetic mutation and habits that
his risk of stroke was, say, 40 percent. 

Conclusions like this could emerge from clusters of
volunteers with common traits. Researchers might cull
smokers with ischemic heart disease to test the hypothesis
that smoking elevates the disease risk by affecting the
variants of certain key genes. 

Cancer and heart disease are "the first two where we will
begin to get some useful information," Sir George said,
information that doctors could use to persuade patients to
change their diets or behavior, or to take a drug, to lower
their risk. 

Biobank, which is expected to choose its chief executive
soon, will be owned by a charity controlled by the British
government, the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research
Council. 

The need for public ownership was a lesson learned from
Iceland. There, the parliament's decision to allow a
commercial company to create its database and use anonymous
patients' records without their consent created a furor. 

Five years ago, evaluating the respective contributions of
genes and environment to common diseases was impossible.
Only in the last year or two have researchers begun to find
some genetic mutations involved. 

The recent progress and the prospect of cheaply reading an
individual's genome on superfast machinery by 2014, make
this kind of immense study feasible. 

Still, some researchers doubt that Biobank will succeed.
Last year in The Lancet, a medical journal based in
Britain, David Clayton at Cambridge and Prof. Paul McKeigue
at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
argued that its design was flawed. 

The objectives of Wellcome and the Medical Research Council
could be achieved more quickly and cheaply by laying down a
bank of anonymous DNA samples from a few thousand cases of
each disease, Professor McKeigue said. "U.K. Biobank will
take more than l5 years to achieve its targets," he added. 

Certainly, its success hinges on the accuracy of doctors'
diagnoses, which can be tricky in heart disease and asthma,
among others. 

Biobank is a gamble, said Sir David Weatherall, a
geneticist at Oxford, who was also the lead author of a
World Health Organization report on genomics and world
health. Issued in the spring, the report included a warning
of a worldwide controversy over the desirability of big
medical and DNA databases. 

He cautioned that mistakes in diagnoses could send
researchers after the wrong genes, and ultimately, the
wrong medicines. 

Biobank believes it can minimize the risk by having its
research nurses check doctors' diagnoses but not re-examine
patients. 

Dr. Christopher O'Donnell, the associate director of the
Framingham Heart Study, the gold standard in epidemiology
in the United States, cautioned that even a 10 percent to
20 percent error rate in classification of disease could
corrupt outcomes. 

Dr. Vivienne Nathanson of the British Medical Association,
said, "We give it a cautious welcome." 

"The caution around it is simply that we do make sure we
have proper public buy-in," Dr. Nathanson added. "DNA will
give very powerful amounts of information about
individuals." Generally, she said, the public is greatly
reluctant to give too much information to the government
"to use as they will." 

Dr. Mike Dexter, director of the Wellcome Trust, said, "The
insurance companies wouldn't be allowed access to any
individual's data, the police wouldn't, of course, unless
there is a major court order and so on." 

But the ambiguity over any sort of court order issued to
the database is worrisome, Dr. Nathanson said. 

Before recruitment of volunteers can start, the project
must pass an ethics review by the National Health Service. 

An oversight body is planned with veto power over access
and ethics. 

"The public consultations held so far have all been
positive, said Lord Hunt of King's Heath, the parliamentary
under secretary of state for health, "but it is still too
early to tell how widespread this feeling is amongst the
broader general public and medical profession." 

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/31/health/genetics/31GENE.html?ex=1042379478&ei=1&en=b04f522fe9d058eb



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