April 2007 issue
Rear View Mirror
Ian Grant
A mistaken understanding of what genetic information reveals
is making us address the wrong infosecurity questions. DNA may give
you 20-20 rear-view vision, but it is no crystal ball.
In a recent review of events since the British government's 2003
White Paper on genetics, Baroness Helena Kennedy, chair of the Human
Genetics Council, said "The White Paper gave an over-optimistic
assessment of the place of genetics in current health care delivery
and a too-eager and insufficiently critical anticipation of future
developments."
She went on to say the National Health Service (NHS) is geared to
delivering treatment rather than prevention, but that genetics research
is all about identifying potential health risks so that those concerned
can mitigate them.
She added that the security-driven need for instant biotechnology
test results means genetic tests on the GP's desk are fast becoming
a reality. "If this technology is transferred to a healthcare
setting, it will have an impact on how and where genetic testing
and counselling is delivered."
Referring to the NHS's national programme for IT, she said, "We
have concerns about the technical and consent problems of record
linkage across families and whether the system will be able to address
the practical, ethical and confidentiality issues this raises."
The bottom line
Advances in genomics, technology and statistics will provide deeper
insights into future possibilities, but actual outcomes are still
likely to remain hostage to the random events of life.
This is bad news for interested parties including politicians,
law enforcers, social reformers, insurance companies and even food
and drug makers. It is good news for the man in the street and lawyers.
When Watson and Crick announced in 1953 that they had modelled
the key of life, they liberated hopes that genetic engineering would
let mankind control life, death and all in between. Those hopes
die hard.
To date, practical experience shows that DNA provides a highly
reliable record of events from prehistory to yesterday. It also
reveals the probability of a future event, typically an inherited
illness, happening to an individual. But an understanding of the
actual trigger for such events is imperfect. And where some hoped
that genetic differences might explain or predict individual and
group behaviours, DNA has proved close to useless.
This failure as a predictive tool means that much of the hoop-la
that surrounds the collection, storage and use of genetic information,
is misplaced. However, an individual's genetic "fingerprint"
has value to individuals, to firms and to society. What we need
is a better way to express that value. This would allow everyone
to address genetic infosecurity cost-effectively.
A good encryption tool
DNA is staggeringly efficient at encrypting and storing data. David
Goodsell, a microbiologist at the Scripps Research Institute, says
each human cell contains about 1.5 gigabytes of data that make up
the genome, the "blueprint" or program, to make a human.
"The DNA double helix is designed to be read. It simply bristles
with information," he says.
Those data represent some six billion nucleotides, called for
convenience A, C, G and T, with A bonding only to T, and C bonding
only to G to form base pairs. These base pairs are arranged into
46 chromosomes that contain genes that influence a particular characteristic
in an organism through heredity. Chromosome 1, the final chromosome
to be spelled out, in May 2006, contains 3,141 genes - nearly twice
as many as the other chromosomes. Humans have between 20,000 and
25,000 genes, 98% of which we share with chimpanzees.
Humans differ by only 0.2% or one in 500 base pairs. But that
is enough to give each of the world's six billion people a unique
identity, thanks to a complicated chemical process that allows DNA
to copy itself when cells divide. This process is very reliable
but not infallible. True copying gives rise to long-lived traits
that pass from parent to child, such as the gene for brown eyes
or Alzheimer's. Its fallibility leads to changes as fast-acting
as cancers, but also to subtle variations that over eons make an
organism more or less successful in its environment, what Darwin
called the origin of species.
Immortal DNA
Not only is the genetic information for an individual perpetuated
through copying and storage in each of the body's 100 trillion cells,
but it lasts long after the body is dead or gone. With current technology,
a DNA match from a single cell can identify a unique whole individual
with a certainty of one in 50 billion. Such accuracy and insight
into a person's physical identity has lead to profound moral and
ethical issues that society is still grappling with.
Security issues
Genomics produces two basic information security issues. The first
has to do with scientific discovery and hence ownership and use
of intellectual property. Knowing how to turn a gene on or off could
stop a person from developing a hereditary disease or perhaps reduce
the chance of them developing cancer from smoking. Such knowledge
is worth billions to someone like a drug manufacturer, and hence,
is worth protecting. For individuals, it might be life-saving, and
thus even more valuable.
The second is the use of genetic information in non-research circumstances.
Government, law enforcement, employers and insurance companies are
just some of those with a corporate interest in DNA to associate
an individual with a place, event or identity. Civil libertarians
fear such knowledge has been used to discriminate against people
on political, social and financial grounds.
Most governments have passed laws to govern the collection and
use of genetic material. Most such law depends on the value the
state gives a person's privacy. US judge Thomas McIntyre Cooley
first defined this as "the right to be let alone". A US
Supreme Court judge, William O Douglas, confirmed privacy is "indeed
the beginning of all freedoms". Other jurisdictions may take
a less liberal view, but the right to privacy is high up in many
national and international constitutions - along with the presumption
of innocence.
Data protection
Where they exist, data protection laws help give effect to the
constitution's aim to defend privacy. Doctor-patient privilege rules
may precede and extend them. But genetic technology is developing
so fast that the legislation is falling behind. A 2002 report by
the California HealthCare Foundation found that the US has no coherent
national policy to cover the storage and protection of genetic information.
Even though the 1996 Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA) covers healthcare workers and health plans, it doesn't
place the same privacy onus on others who have access to that information.
These include employers, drug firms, life assurance companies, and
researchers. However, this many change if Congress passes new HIPAA
provisions this year.
Helen Wallace, deputy director of GeneWatch, an industry watchdog,
reckons the UK's Data Protection Act is important but not strong
enough regarding the use of genetic data. "The police and security
agencies do not need consent or to inform suspects to collect and
use such data," she says. Nor does it protect information that
is released. "If it leaks, there is a free-for-all," she
adds.
" We would like to see some specific safeguards for genetic
privacy and dissemination," she says. "There have been
discussions but not much political will to get them into law."
One idea is to give individuals property rights, something like
a trade secret, over their genetic information. US lawyers Mary
Hildebrand, Jacqueline Klosek and Walter Krzastek argue that "through
property rights, an individual could have a series of rights regarding
the control, possession and transferability of genetic information
that are unavailable through privacy legislation".
Corporate interests are unlikely to welcome this. UK Biobank's
executive director Tim Peakman warns it could raise costs if researchers
had to pay for samples. The lawyers counter that it could encourage
people to provide samples if they stood to benefit directly. It
could also ensure that individuals monitor who is doing what with
their data, thus putting the primary responsibility for infosecurity
on them. Who indeed has a greater vested interest?
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