Genetic screening for susceptibility to depression: can we and should we?


Autoria(s): Morley, K. I.; Hall, W. D.; Carter, L.
Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

Objective: To summarize current knowledge about genetic susceptibility to mood disorders and examine ethical and policy issues that will need to be addressed if robustly replicated susceptibility alleles lead to proposals to screen and intervene with persons at increased genetic risk of developing mood disorders. Method: Empirical studies and reviews of the genetics of unipolar and bipolar depression were collected via MEDLINE and psycINFO database searches. Results: A number of candidate genes for depression have been identified, each of which increases the risk of mood disorders two- or threefold. None of the associations between these alleles and mood disorders have been consistently reported to date. Conclusions: Screening the population for genetic susceptibility to mood disorders is unlikely to be a practically useful policy (given plausible assumptions). Until there are effective treatments for persons at increased risk, screening is arguably unethical. Screening within affected families to advise on risks of developing depression would entail screening children and adolescents, raising potentially serious ethical issues of consent and stigmatization. Genetic research on depression should continue under appropriate ethical guidelines that protect the interests of research participants.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:73263

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Blackwell Publishing Asia

Palavras-Chave #Depression #Ethics #Genetic Screening #Genetics #Bipolar Affective-disorder #Unipolar Affective-disorders #Serotonin Transporter #Major Depression #Mood Disorders #Monoamine-oxidase #Ethical Issues #Molecular-genetics #Complex Disease #Unmet Needs #Psychiatry #C1 #321213 Human Bioethics #730307 Health policy evaluation #220101 Bioethics (human and animal) #160508 Health Policy
Tipo

Journal Article