| Literature DB >> 31978192 |
Floor M Goekoop1, Carla G van El2, Guy A M Widdershoven1, Nadza Dzinalija1, Martina C Cornel2, Natalie Evans1.
Abstract
EU legislation prohibits clinical trials that modify germ line 'genetic identity'. 'Genetic identity' however, is left undefined. This study aims to identify the use of the term 'genetic identity' in academic literature, and investigate its relevance for debates on genetic modification. A total of 616 articles that contained the term were identified. Content analysis revealed that the term was used in various and contradicting ways and a clear understanding of the term is lacking. This review demonstrates that the EU legislation is open to interpretation, because of the diversity of meaning with which 'genetic identity' is currently used. Because of the diversity of meaning with which 'genetic identity' is used and understood, further reflection is needed. This requires further medical, legal, ethical and social debate and a coordinated response at both a European and a global level.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31978192 PMCID: PMC6980575 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0228263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| English | Non-English |
| Human genetic identity | Non-human genetic identity |
| Articles | Books |
| Full text access | No full-text access |
| Defined or undefined use of the term | Term only in footnotes or bibliography |
| Term only quoted from legislation | |
| Term not used / found in article | |
| Duplicates |
Coding scheme.
| Code | Freq. | Description |
|---|---|---|
| A. ANCESTRY AND HERITAGE (325 times coded in 302 articles) | ||
| 1. Parentage | 125 | Genetic parentage and the right or need to know one’s own parentage |
| 2. Genetic relatedness or similarity | ||
| i. Genetically identical | 65 | Being genetically identical, as opposed to genetic diversity |
| ii. The sharing of biological characteristics | 62 | Genetic connectedness and the inheritability and transmittance of certain characteristics |
| 3. Population genetics | ||
| i. Ethnicity or race | 48 | (The study of) certain ethnic groups, the tracing of people |
| ii. | 25 | Probability of two genes taken at random being of the same allelic type |
| B. PERSONAL IDENTITY (242 times coded in 174 articles) | ||
| 1 Personal and social identity | 94 | Relation between personal/social identity and genetic identity |
| 2. Disease identity | 42 | Concerning genetic disorders or predispositions and the felt responsibility for these conditions |
| 3. Religious and spiritual identity | 14 | Relation between religious / spiritual identity and genetic identity |
| 4. Gender identity | Genetic identity as having a male or female identity | |
| 5. Critiques of genetic determinism or essentialism | 31 | Including genetic essentialism, genism, ‘true’ identity, determinism |
| 6. External or environmental influences | 36 | External or environmental influences on identity, including epigenetics |
| 7. Human identity | 17 | Concerning humanness / species membership as human |
| C. (THE BEGINNING OF) INDIVIDUALITY (219 times coded in 194 articles) | ||
| 1. Uniqueness and autonomy | 56 | Including the right to uniqueness and the right to a random genetic identity (as opposed to something predetermined), rights and duties and denial of rights |
| 2. The beginning of life | 61 | Regarding the first determination of (unique) genetic identity of the “child-to-be” (and need for protection), start of personhood and the status of embryo |
| 3. Modification, alteration and selection | 102 | Including cloning, gene editing, the non-identity problem (protection of future children will alter future children and therefore cannot protect them), wrongful life, parental liability, and the creation of genetic identity as a means to an end (eg. designer babies or siblings of children with leukemia) |
| D. PRIVACY AND PROPERTY (162 times coded in 147 articles) | ||
| 1. Identification and the protection of genetic information | 122 | Identification in forensics or in familial genetic testing, protection and misuse of sensible information (including discrimination) |
| 2. Durability of genetic identity | 6 | Concerning DNA’s capacity to survive over long periods of time |
| 3. Ownership of genetic identity and the commercialization of genetic information | 34 | Concerning gene ownership (often regarding genetic research/patents), ownership of (future) children, gene theft or commercial exploitation |
| E. REGIONS OF DNA (60 times coded in 49 articles) | ||
| 1. Order of one’s DNA | 11 | Arrangement of genes, base sequence, not further specified |
| 2. Nuclear DNA | 10 | DNA contained within the nucleus |
| 3. MtDNA | 14 | DNA contained within the mitochondria, inherited exclusively from mother |
| 4. Y-chromosome DNA | 4 | DNA contained in the Y chromosome, past only from father to son |
| 5. Germline DNA | 7 | The DNA in germ cells (egg and sperm cells) |
| 6. (Complete) Genome | 14 | All genetic material of an organism |
| F. CELLS AND GENES (coded in 55 articles) | ||
| 1. Specific (parts of) human cells including specific (parts of) genes | 55 | The genetic identity of specific cells, cell lines, parts of cells (e.g. enzymes, membranes), the description of certain loci, deletions, insertions or other genetic defects |
Discipline, location and time categories.
| Categories | Including |
|---|---|
| Disciplines | |
| 1. Law | Law, criminology, justice & security, legal studies |
| 2. Social and behavioral sciences | Psychology, sociology, social work, anthropology, political science, geography, economics, politics, human ecology, journalism, social development |
| 3. Humanities | Religious studies, philosophy, historical sciences, literature, ethics, bioethics, medical humanities, rhetoric |
| 4. Life sciences | Biology, medicine, immunology, microbiology, bimolecular engineering, psychiatry, legal medicine, genetics, ecology health sciences, forensic genetics, biophysics, computational biology, orthodontics, medical education, cyber genetics, biochemistry, pharmacology |
| 5. Physical sciences and mathematics | Mathematics, physics, technology, statistics |
| Location | |
| 1. Northern America | United States of America, Canada, Hawaii |
| 2. North and Western Europe | Ireland, the United Kingdom, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, France, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland |
| 3. South and Eastern Europe | Portugal, Spain, Italy, Vatican, Greece, Slovenia, Russia, Poland |
| 4. Oceania | Australia, New Zealand |
| 5. Asia | China, Korea, Japan, India, Taiwan, Israel, Iran |
| 6. Latin America & Caribbean | Argentina, Chile, Brazil, Colombia, Cuba, Mexico |
| 7. Africa | South Africa, Morocco, Tunisia, Kenya |
| Time | |
| 1. 1967–1976 | |
| 2. 1977–1986 | |
| 3. 1987–1996 | |
| 4. 1997–2006 | |
| 5. 2007–2018 |
Fig 1PRISMA flow diagram of article selection for inclusion.
Fig 2Number of articles using the term ‘genetic identity’ by discipline, location, and year.
Fig 3Number of articles for each ‘genetic identity’ meaning category by discipline, location, and year.