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THE DECLARATION OF INUYAMA
Human Genome Mapping, Genetic Screening and Gene
Therapy
The Council for International Organizations of Medical
Sciences held its XXIVth Round Table Conference, on the
subject of Genetics, Ethics and Human Values:
Human Genome Mapping, Genetic Screening and Therapy, in
Tokyo and in Inuyama City, Japan, from 22-27 July 1990. The
Conference was held under the auspices of the Science
Council of Japan, and cosponsored by the World Health
Organization and the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization. It was the fifth in a series
entitled Health Policy, Ethics and Human Values: An
International Dialogue, begun in Athens in
1984. The participants, numbering 102, came from 24
countries, representing all continents.
In addition to biomedical
scientists and physicians, the participants represented a
wide range of disciplines including sociology, psychology,
epidemiology, law, social policy, philosophy and theology,
and brought with them experience in hospital and public
health medicine, universities and private industry, and the
executive and legislative branches of government. Through
presentations and discussions in plenary sessions and
working groups, they reached broad agreement on a number of
central issues. At its final session the Conference agreed
on the following Declaration.
I. Discussion of human genetics is dominated
today by the efforts now under way on an international basis
to map and sequence the human genome. Such attention is
warranted by the scale of the undertaking and its expected
contribution to knowledge about human biology and disease.
At the same time, the nature of the undertaking, concerned
as it is with the basic elements of life, and the potential
for abuse of the new knowledge which the project will
generate, are giving rise to anxiety. The Conference agrees
that efforts to map the human genome present no inherent
ethical problems but are eminently worthwhile, especially as
the knowledge revealed will be universally applicable to
benefit human health. In terms of ethics and human values,
what must be assured are that the manner in which gene
mapping efforts are implemented adheres to ethical standards
of research and that the knowledge gained will be used
appropriately, particularly in genetic screening and gene
therapy.
II. Public concern about the growth of genetic
knowledge stems in part from the misconception that while
the knowledge reveals an essential aspect of humanness it
also diminishes human beings by reducing them to mere base
pairs of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). This misconception can
be corrected by education of the public and open discussion,
which should reassure the public that plans for the medical
use of genetic findings and techniques will be made openly
and responsibly.
III. Some types of genetic testing or treatment
not yet in prospect could raise novel issues - for example,
whether limits should be placed on DNA alterations in human
germ cells, because such changes would affect future
generations, whose consent cannot be obtained and whose best
interests would be difficult to calculate. The Conference
concludes, however, that for the most part present genetic
research and services do not raise unique or even novel
issues, although their connection to private matters such as
reproduction and personal health and life prospects, and the
rapidity of advances in genetic knowledge and technology,
accentuate the need for ethical sensitivity in
policy-making.
IV. It is primarily in regard to genetic testing
that the human genome project gives rise to concern about
ethics and human values. The identification, cloning and
sequencing of new genes without first needing to know their
protein products greatly expand the possible scope for
screening and diagnostic tests. The central objective of
genetic screening and diagnosis should always be to
safeguard the welfare of the person tested: test results
must always be protected against unconsented disclosure,
confidentiality must be ensured at all costs, and adequate
counselling must be provided. Physicians and others who
counsel should endeavour to ensure that all those concerned
understand the difference between being the carrier of a
defective gene and having the corresponding genetic disease.
In autosomal recessive conditions, the health of carriers
(heterozygotes) is usually not affected by their having a
single copy of the disease gene; in dominant disorders, what
is of concern is the manifestation of the disease, not the
mere presence of the defective gene, especially when years
may elapse between the results of a genetic test and the
manifestation of the disease.
V. The genome project will produce knowledge of
relevance to human gene therapy, which will very soon be
clinically applicable to a few rare but very burdensome
recessive disorders. Alterations in somatic cells, which
will affect only the DNA of the treated individual, should
be evaluated like other innovative therapies. Particular
attention by independent ethicrl review committees is
necessary, especially when gene therapy involves children,
as it will for many of the disorders in question.
Interventions should be limited to conditions that cause
significant disability and not employed merely to enhance or
suppress cosmetic, behavioural or cognitive characteristics
unrelated to any recognized human disease.
VI. The modification of human germ cells for
therapeutic or preventive purposes would be technically much
more difficult than that of somatic cells and is not at
present in prospect. Such therapy might, however, be the
only means of treating certain conditions, so continued
discussion of both its technical and its ethical aspects is
essential. Before germ-line therapy is undertaken, its
safety must be very well established, for changes in germ
cells would affect the descendants of patients.
VII. Genetic researchers and therapists have a
strong responsibility to ensure that the techniques they
develop are used ethically. By insisting on truly voluntary
programmes designed to benefit directly those involved, they
can ensure that no precedents are set for eugenic programmes
or other misuse of the techniques by the State or by private
parties. One means of ensuring the setting and observance of
ethical standards is continuous multidisciplinary and
transcultural dialogue.
VIII. The needs of developing countries should receive
special attention, to ensure that they obtain their due
share of the benefits that ensue from the human genome
project. In particular, methods and techniques of testing
and therapy that are affordable and easily accessible to the
populations of such countries should be developed and
disseminated whenever possible.
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