| Literature DB >> 31122281 |
Stephanie O M Dyke1,2, Katie M Saulnier3, Charles Dupras3, Amy P Webster4, Karen Maschke5, Mark Rothstein6, Reiner Siebert7, Jörn Walter8, Stephan Beck4, Tomi Pastinen9,10, Yann Joly3.
Abstract
As epigenetic studies become more common and lead to new insights into health and disease, the return of individual epigenetic results to research participants, in particular in large-scale epigenomic studies, will be of growing importance. Members of the International Human Epigenome Consortium (IHEC) Bioethics Workgroup considered the potential ethical, legal, and social issues (ELSI) involved in returning epigenetic research results and incidental findings in order to produce a set of 'Points-to-consider' (P-t-C) for the epigenetics research community. These P-t-C draw on existing guidance on the return of genetic research results, while also integrating the IHEC Bioethics Workgroup's ELSI research on and discussion of the issues associated with epigenetic data as well as the experience of a return of results pilot study by the Personal Genome Project UK (PGP-UK). Major challenges include how to determine the clinical validity and actionability of epigenetic results, and considerations related to environmental exposures and epigenetic marks, including circumstances warranting the sharing of results with family members and third parties. Interdisciplinary collaboration and good public communication regarding epigenetic risk will be important to advance the return of results framework for epigenetic science.Entities:
Keywords: ELSI; Epigenetics; Incidental findings; Return of results
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31122281 PMCID: PMC6533659 DOI: 10.1186/s13073-019-0646-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 11.117