The Genome — a Pandora's Box?

Posted: October 4, 2012 at 11:20 am

In its fourth and last segment of its '$1,000 Genome' series, NPR's health blog, Shots, asks what people can expect to learn from their own genome sequence, and why they might not want to learn everything.

Beau Gunderson, a Silicon Valley startup employee, recently had his exome sequenced and found out that he did not inherit an Alzheimer's gene variants and shares some genes with Olympic sprinters, NPR's Rob Stein reports. But Gunderson still wonders what his genome could tell him about diseases he might get.

Others think that sequencing could open a Pandora's Box. "There are also people walking around out there who carry mutations that create an extraordinarily high probability that they will develop a horrendous, untreatable, unpreventable disease by age 50, 60 years old," says James Evans of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. "That isn't necessarily information that everybody wants."

Furthermore, there could be genetic discrimination for life and disability insurance, and in the future, thugs might plant someone's DNA at a crime scene.

But proponents argue the potential benefits of sequencing "far outweigh" any risks, and that people "just have a right to have their genome," Stein writes.

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The Genome — a Pandora's Box?

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