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Privacy proving elusive for donors of DNA

Updated: 2013-06-30 07:37

By Gina Kolata(The New York Times)

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Privacy proving elusive for donors of DNA

Not so long ago, people who provided DNA for research were told their privacy was assured. Their DNA sequences were on available Web sites, yes, but they did not include names or other identifiers. These were research databases, scientists said, not like the forensic ones kept by the F.B.I.

But lately geneticists have been given hints that subjects in fact could sometimes be identified by their DNA alone. In January, a researcher at the Whitehead Institute, which is affiliated with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, managed to track down five people selected at random from a database using only their DNA, ages and the states in which they lived. And he did it in just hours. He also found relatives - a total of close to 50 people.

This month an international group of nearly 80 researchers, patient advocates, universities and organizations like the National Institutes of Health in the United States announced that it wants to consolidate the world's databases of DNA and other genetic information, making data easier for researchers to retrieve and share. But the security and privacy of the study subjects are paramount concerns, said Dr. David Altshuler of the Broad Institute of Harvard University and M.I.T., a leader of the group.

"The problems are not yet solved in any general way," Dr. Altshuler said.

In 2008, David W. Craig, a geneticist at TGen, a research institute in Phoenix, Arizona, theoretically proved that a particular person's DNA could be found amid a mass of other samples. The N.I.H. quickly responded, moving all genetic data from the studies it financed behind Internet firewalls.

But another sort of genetic data - so-called RNA expression profiles that show patterns of gene activity - was still public. Such data could not be used to identify people, or so it was thought.

Then Eric E. Schadt of Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York discovered that RNA expression data could be used not only to identify someone but also to learn a great deal about that person. "We can create a profile that reflects your weight, whether you are diabetic, how old you are," Dr. Schadt said.

Then, this year, Yaniv Erlich, a genetics researcher at the Whitehead Institute, used a new computational tool he had invented to identify by name five people from their DNA, which he had randomly selected from a research database.

Experts were startled. "We are in what I call an awareness moment," said Eric D. Green of the National Human Genome Research Institute at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland.

Research subjects who share their DNA may risk a loss of their own privacy and that of their children and grandchildren, who will inherit many of the same genes, said Mark B. Gerstein, a Yale University professor.

George Church, a Harvard geneticist, said there appears to be no technical solution to the issue of DNA privacy. "If you believe you can just encrypt terabytes of data or anonymize them, there will always be people who hack through that," Dr. Church said.

People who provide genetic information, he said, should simply be informed that a loss of privacy is likely, rather than unlikely.

The New York Times

(China Daily 06/30/2013 page11)

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