The Tiresias Complex: Huntington's disease as a
paradigm of testing for late-onset disorders
NANCY S. WEXLER
Department of Neurology and Psychiatry,
College of Physicians and Surgeons,
Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA
ABSTRACT: Huntington's disease represents the first disorder for which
positional cloning techniques successfully localized an autosomal gene --
in 1983. Events since that time have proved the gene recalcitrant to
identification and characterization. Since 1986, presymptomatic and
prenatal testing for Huntington's disease has been available
internationally, although on a limited basis. Testing for Huntington's
disease provides an excellent model for designing service programs for
genetic testing for late-onset, fatal disorders, particularly when the gene
is not yet in hand and no therapeutic intervention is possible. Special
training and precautions must be in place before presymptomatic genetic
testing should be offered.
-- Wexler, N.S. The Tiresias complex: Huntington's disease as a paradigm
of testing for late-onset disorders.
FASEB J. 6:2820-2825; 1992
Key Words: hereditary * genetic counseling * genetic decision making *
psychosocial reaction to genetic information * neurodegenerative disease
THE BLIND SEER TIRESIAS CONFRONTED Oedipus with the quintessential dilemma
of modern genetics: "It is but sorrow to be wise when wisdom profits not"
(1). Do you want to know how and when you are going to die, especially if
you have no power to change the outcome? How does a person choose to learn
this momentous information? How does one cope with the answer?
Ball and Harper (2) cogently describe some of the arenas in which we, as
professionals, families that are involved, and society in general confront
challenges with respect to testing for Huntington's disease, a fatal,
autosomal dominant, neurodegenerative disorder of mid-life onset. They
conclude by saying that testing for Huntington's disease is a harbinger of
things to come, such as we are already witnessing in testing for familial
Alzheimer's disease and other disorders. Ball and Harper (2) also observe
that the gene causing Huntington's disease will soon be cloned and a direct
test for the gene will be made available.
Ball and Harper (2) comment on the ethical issues involved in providing
testing services. If one construes the provision of good service as an
ethical requirement and any deviation as an ethical breach, the
conversation remains on ethical territory. But I believe some of the most
perplexing, demanding, and absorbing dilemmas and frictions surround
varying definitions of adequate care and delivery of services. Much of the
stress associated with the test and many of the most vexing questions are
not necessarily ethical, but clinical.
Almost all of these issues will be exacerbated when the Huntington's
disease gene (HD gene) is cloned and a direct test using oligonucleotides
for the gene is at hand. We are still unprepared and ill-equipped for the
limited amount of testing we are currently offering. When a direct test
exists, demand for the test may well increase. The linkage test as it now
exists is onerous to take, because it requires that many relatives of a
person requesting to be tested give blood for DNA analysis and undergo
neurological examinations. Some people at risk have stated that these
necessities dissuade them from being tested. Also, all those who have
insufficiently genetically informative families will be eligible for
testing once we can test for the gene itself. If demand for the test
increases, we will be in a worse position: lacking trained personnel to
provide counseling and other services, absent monitoring and follow-up, and
in danger of making grave mistakes.
WHAT INFORMATION IS LEARNED -- NOW AND IN THE FUTURE?
The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University has provided
presymptomatic and prenatal testing for Huntington's disease as a pilot
research project since 1986. As director of this program and primary
counselor, I have had the opportunity to speak with more than 100
individuals at risk and their family members regarding testing. I have
also had the benefit of conversations with my colleagues in the U.S.,
Canada, and Europe who provide testing, and many of the points made here
reflect our common experience. (The few published articles on testing for
Huntington's disease have focused on laboratory more than clinical aspects;
the wealth of clinical information collected at testing centers has yet to
be published.) The following observations are distillations of several
years of research at Columbia University and input from my colleagues.
Data are from in-depth interviews. Although anecdotal in nature, they are
meant to guide us toward additional areas of research and policy
development with respect to test development and monitoring.
Presymptomatic testing for Huntington's disease makes use of closely linked
markers for the gene to determine whether a person has a very high
likelihood of either escaping or developing the disease (3, 4). In a
genetically informative family, there is a small (between 2% and 4%) chance
that a recombination event separates the markers from the gene and the
information being provided in the test does not reflect the actual genetic
reality (5-10). The fact that one only changes one's odds and does not get
definitive information dissuades some, perhaps many, from taking the test.
They feel it is futile to suffer needlessly if the test cannot provide
definitive information with respect to the presence or absence of the gene.
The ambiguity in the position of the gene makes it difficult to specify
recombination fractions precisely, even with the newest markers being used.
Many testing programs consider a family genetically uninformative if the
newly calculated risk is not at least 96% in either direction, increased or
decreased risk; in this instance a client is told that the test is
noninformative.
Once the test is completely informative, barring laboratory error, these
people may believe that their "excuse" is now gone and feel compelled to
take a test about which they are highly ambivalent. Against the prevailing
ethos of our society that knowledge is power and that both are good, a
rational, scientific reason for demurring from the test is the only one
that counts. Once these "pseudo-legitimate" reservations are removed, what
remains is only the preference not to know -- an unpopular point of view
since the age of reason.
The existence of the recombination fraction, the percentage chance that the
information given was not correct, may mean vastly different things to
those who have been tested, depending on their resultant genotypes. Those
with a high likelihood of escaping the disease virtually ignore the
possibility that a recombination event might have occurred. Compared to a
previous high risk, a new low risk is perceived as certainty of escaping
the disease. The recombination fraction becomes merely an intellectual
construct with no meaning.
To those with a heightened risk, however, that fraction can swell to take
over the field: since someone has to be a recombinant, why not them?
Jason Brandt, head of the John Hopkins University testing program, reported
that in follow-up visits after an initial result of increased risk,
subjects rated their risk as once again approaching 50%, notwithstanding a
realization that their risk was reported to them to be 96% or higher. When
asked to explain this discrepancy they replied, "The test was in error."
"I am a recombinant." "God -- or science -- will save me." (J. Brandt,
personal communication.)
Denial and hope are the twin mainstays of survival in impossible
circumstances. To some extent, denial and hope must be present in order to
take a presymptomatic test: denial that the disease is present and hope
for a good outcome. In the Columbia University testing program people
requested the test to know the truth, to end uncertainty, and to plan for
the future -- and all hoped to learn that the disease was not present. If
the test reveals that the gene is most likely to be found, denial and hope
must be remobilized as even more necessary defenses. Many deny that the
disease will start any time soon -- even while in the same breath saying
that they notice symptoms in themselves -- and hope, passionately, for a
cure in the interim.
Once a molecular test for the gene itself is available, the possibility of
taking comfort from the recombination fraction will be removed and
realities of the information will be made more stark.
PRENATAL TESTING
There are two types of prenatal tests being offered as part of
presymptomatic testing programs (11-13). In full-disclosure prenatal
testing, the fetus is treated as an at-risk individual and the genotype of
the fetus is determined fully.
The prenatal testing most frequently requested is "non- disclosing," or
exclusion testing. An expectant couple is only told if the fetus has
inherited the short arm of chromosome 4, known to be the locus for the HD
gene, from the affected or unaffected grandparent (1, 10). This test is
particularly valuable in two circumstances: 1) when at-risk parents do not
have sufficiently genetically informative families to determine their
genotypes definitely and 2) when at-risk parents prefer not to know their
genotypes. Prenatal information about the fetus's genotype can still be
given, but the probabilities for the fetus are either the same as for the
at-risk parent, usually 50% depending on the age of the parent, or a 1% or
2% risk, approximately one-half the risk of recombination.
Most people who choose exclusion testing do not have sufficiently
genetically informative families to be tested themselves. Exclusion
testing is their only chance to ensure that offspring will not have the HD
gene. If the outcome is good, parents can revel in the knowledge that
their children and grandchildren will be forever free from suffering the
disease, even if their own parenting may be compromised or cut short by the
onset of Huntington's disease.
If parents are unlucky, they are faced with the choice of aborting a fetus
with a 50% risk of developing the disease. To some, this is tantamount to
aborting themselves, as they share the identical risk. It is absolutely
essential to determine a couple's motivations for requesting prenatal
testing before beginning the process. There is no medical justification
for performing prenatal testing for Huntington's disease if termination is
not the intention. If a couple decides to continue the pregnancy and the
at-risk parent subsequently develops Huntington's disease, it is obvious
that the child will follow in its parent's footsteps. The right of privacy
for a minor is violated if the child's genotype is revealed through its
parents. Obviously individuals always are entitled to change their minds.
But careful counseling can help clarify misunderstandings about the test
and work through possible alternative outcomes before a couple is committed
to a path of action (see ref 2 for discussion of testing minors).
In-depth and detailed counseling must accompany both disclosing and
nondisclosing prenatal testing. Ball and Harper (2) emphasize this point
and I strongly concur. Because of the delicate and complex issues
surrounding any kind of testing in which detection of increased risk of
Huntington's disease may occur, when prenatal services are offered they
should be incorporated into a specialized Huntington's disease testing
program rather than be part of routine prenatal testing services. Not
every presymptomatic testing program is required to have a prenatal testing
component. Even more important, every general service genetic counseling
program should not provide prenatal testing for Huntington's disease
without some special training.
Once a probe for the gene is available in the future, prenatal testing that
is fully disclosing may more often be sought by couples who right now
cannot or do not wish to know the at-risk parent's genotype. Some parents
may opt to test the fetus without testing themselves. If the fetus has a
normal genotype, the at-risk parent is spared knowing his or her genotype.
But if the fetus tests positive for the HD gene, a double tragedy occurs
when parent and child are diagnosed simultaneously. Some people who
themselves are diagnosed presymptomatically struggle with choices about
whether or not to test further pregnancies or bear children at all. (N.S.
Wexler and M.R. Hayden, personal communications with persons in testing
programs.) Counseling must help individuals choose their best
psychological options.
WHO COMES FOR TESTING AND WHY?
There are several categories of people coming for counseling, each group
with slightly different motivations (14- 18). Those coming for family
planning purposes have already been discussed.
The newly at risk
Most people whose parents have just been diagnosed find themselves
intensely uncomfortable with their new situation of ambiguity. Anything
seems better than uncertainty. And yet these people are frequently
unfamiliar with Huntington's disease, particularly in its last stages, and
cannot really make an informed choice as to whether or not they wish to
know if this is to be their fate. Ensuring that clients know the face of
the disease is difficult for counselors, particularly when at the same time
they must shoal up the defenses of people who have just learned of their
own risk. Videotapes and literature can provide graphic means of rapid
education but can also be traumatic for the unprepared. The wife of a
newly diagnosed young man saw a television program on Huntington's disease
and said she "cried for a year afterwards."
The altruistic at risk
Most older at-risk individuals have made decisions regarding marriage,
children, and careers and have usually had many years to come to terms with
their risk, although they are by no means complacent about being out of
danger. But they know that time is on their side; their odds have declined
and they hope for the best. Some feel -- correctly -- that their decreased
odds make it more likely for them to have a good outcome on a
presymptomatic test; but others do not want to dash their conviction, still
tenuous, that they have escaped.
The "altruistic testee" usually has children who are old enough to date, or
even marry and have children. If the older at-risk parent is tested and is
clear, so too is the next generation. In some instances, at-risk parents
have not yet informed their children that they and their children are at
risk. Parents gamble that if the news is good they will never have to face
this calamitous prospect. Altruistic testees would not be tested if it
were not for the benefit of others, and many prefer not to be tested.
Helping theses parents cope with a bad outcome is difficult, as they did
not wish to know for their own sakes, and the newly increased risk for
their children brings dramatic repercussions for the entire family.
If an altruistic parent is tested who genuinely prefers not to be, any
resulting depression or even suicide after a gene- positive diagnosis can
be as harmful or more to the family than living in doubt and hope. An
important role for the counselor is to legitimize not taking the test as
well as taking it.
Often younger parents will ask to be tested in order to clarify the risk
for their young children. If the counselor suggests that these parents
bank DNA for security and wait a few years to see the outcome of research
(if nothing else is pressing them to be tested), these parents are
immensely relieved and grateful. Many express the feeling that they
thought one should be tested in order to be a good parent. Especially if
parents feel guilty about having children and exposing them to any risk,
being tested themselves against their own desires is a way of atoning.
Making sure that parents bank DNA is the most important factor. There may
be variants of the HD gene that necessitate knowing which allele
predominates in a family.
Young adults
The majority of people requesting testing are young adults: some just
starting out in life and facing critical decisions; others who have already
chosen a marriage or career and even children. The majority of these
people say they want to be tested to end the uncertainty. Some may be
contemplating a career change or an additional child if the outcome is
good. Most are young enough so that a positive diagnosis does not mean
that the disease is imminent, but they are old enough to imagine symptoms
in themselves and watch themselves for every physical or psychological
misstep.
Counseling with this group is the most complicated and perilous. Their
genetic risk is highest. They may be showing minute neurological
abnormalities that might mean nothing and might mean everything. Telling
them about these concerns may convince them that the disease has already
begun, and the counselor or neurologist could easily be wrong. And yet
these signs might presage a positive result on the diagnostic test. One
must weigh how catastrophic this outcome might be to each individual.
People who come for testing are usually well aware of the benefits of
presymptomatic testing; it is this knowledge that propels them toward the
test. The test is their only opportunity to end the uncertainty of their
situation and plan unambiguously for the future. Many would like to
resolve this central, pervasive mystery in their lives once and for all.
But even though people have thought intensely about what it means to be at
risk and about the test itself, they often have not actually thought
through just how this new diagnostic information will be integrated into
their lives. They are very specific about what they will do if the disease
is not present, but less certain about what they would do if the outcome
indicates that the HD gene is most likely there. The counseling process
should focus on helping people choose whether or not they wish to be tested
and understanding the impact of the test results.
At the Columbia University testing program we found that many people at
risk feel paralyzed to some degree by their risk situation, unable to move
in any direction. Some believe that a gene-negative outcome will free them
to do the things they are now impeded from pursuing and a gene-positive
outcome will galvanize them to use whatever time they have left
constructively. A major component of our counseling revolves around this
paralysis. Why has the paralysis thwarted them until now and will it
continue to do so regardless of the test outcome? Often the obstacles
people put in the way of action are illusory but have become ingrained as
character structure. A test result can act like dynamite to get people
moving, but counseling or therapy can also have the same effect, perhaps in
a more lasting fashion.
Individuals coming for testing will frequently state that they want to be
tested to determine whether to continue in school, change jobs, get
married, sign up in advance for a nursing home with a long waiting list, or
take a vacation. If one presses whether these choices are really dependent
on having diagnostic information, it usually turns out they are not.
People can be encouraged to pursue fulfilling plans regardless of
Huntington's disease. As a first step in the counseling process we try to
help people clarify what, to them, is a satisfying life, rather than
organizing their lives around the specter of Huntington's disease. The
second step is to explore the potential impact of positive or negative test
results on their current situation and on future plans. If people decide
to make changes on the basis of their own preference, we try to help them
predict the impact of a diagnosis of Huntington's disease on these new life
plans. Would it or should it impede them? For example, a person at risk
sometimes requests testing in order to inform a fiance of what might lie
ahead. The fiance, however, does not always want to know because he or she
does not intend to break the engagement regardless of the outcome and wants
the wedding to be a happy occasion.
Anecdotal evidence from testing centers around the world suggests that
those receiving a gene-negative outcome felt freer to make changes in their
lives. Those with a gene-positive result tended not to make the changes
they had claimed before testing that they wished to make. By and large,
both groups did not change as much as they had anticipated before testing.
It has been our experience that it helps in coping with the test and its
outcome when people understand their motivations as clearly as possible.
This, in turn, enables them to make the most appropriate decisions.
One of the main reasons people request presymptomatic testing is to end
uncertainty. Some individuals also claim that they despise being at risk
and cannot bear the endless anxiety of watching themselves for symptoms.
They feel that this state of chronic anxiety is as bad as the disease
itself, or is in fact prodromal to the disease and they are already
affected. They are convinced of the worst and want to end the anxiety and
dread of waiting for the diagnosis.
The irony of this stance is that some people who most detest the
uncertainty of being at risk also hate and fear every aspect of the disease
itself. It is mostly their conviction that the disease is already there
that makes them want to proceed with the test. Yet hope still persists
that they are wrong, or they would not be so tortured by uncertainty. If
people are so disturbed by the possibility of having Huntington's disease
because they see the disorder as so unbearable, why do they expect the
reality of it to be any better? If they cannot accommodate to the idea of
having this disease when they have a 1 in 2 chance of escaping it, why do
they assume they will adjust better when they know the disease will soon be
present? And they might be equally tormented by anxiety, wondering when
the illness will begin. Good news will relieve them of this prison, but
what will bad news bring? Counselors must carefully review with them
before the test how they relieve the anxiety of worrying about Huntington's
disease when they are at risk; for example, do they persuade themselves
that their symptoms are merely imaginary? What means of reassurance will
they use, knowing that the disease gene is, in fact, at hand?
COUNSELING ISSUES
Everyone who takes a presymptomatic or prenatal test for Huntington's
disease gambles. People do not want to learn that the disease is present,
but are willing to risk finding out in the hope of learning something
better or changing a state of uncertainty. They gamble that the outcome
will be worth the risk.
Kahneman and Tversky (19, 20) have shown that most people are not adverse
to taking risks, only to taking losses. When they perceive themselves to
be in a "win" situation, they will be more conservative in order to
preserve the win. If they believe that they are already in a "lose"
situation, they will be more willing to gamble to escape the loss, even if
they risk greater losses in so doing.
Genetic counseling should help delineate the gains and losses before them.
What could be gained by the information and what could be lost? Is the joy
of hearing good news worth risking the turmoil of hearing bad news? Is the
satisfaction of ending the agony of uncertainty worth risking knowing the
certitude of a prolonged and early death? What can people do after
tomorrow's news that they cannot do today? Some people who feel most
impeded by their risk situation, whether it is not knowing their own fate,
not being able to plan, wishing to have children, or feeling responsible
for the fate of others, feel themselves to be already in a loss situation
and so are most willing to gamble. If they perceived their lives
differently, would it change what risks they take?
FUTURE PROGNOSTICATIONS
Gene positive
Even for the best prepared, it is almost inconceivable to imagine hearing
that one is going to die of a progressively fatal disease that robs one of
intellectual prowess while retaining the capacity to comprehend the loss --
a disease that leaves the body in a constant tumult of roiling motion, saps
speech, and leaves one dependent for many years.
To date, the response to this information has been measured. A few have
attempted suicide or have required brief hospitalizations. But the
majority seem not to have had major and detectable cataclysms in their
lives. There may be fewer than 100 people worldwide who have tested
positive for the gene (21), and we have yet to follow this group for very
long -- certainly not until they become diagnosed symptomatically, which
will be another critical phase. Also, for the most part people have
received testing at centers specializing in Huntington's disease with
extensive pre- and post-test counseling given by experts in the field.
This is now changing as the test becomes more widely available.
In addition to the visible and noisy upheavals caused by diagnostic
information, we must be acutely attuned to the subterranean disturbances.
What effect does the news that one is gene-positive have on day-to-day
life, on buying new clothes or investing in a house or car, on family
relations, on the incessant internal conversations that were once cluttered
with thoughts of being at risk? It is not in the big events, people say,
but in the daily routine and fantasies of the future that the news strikes
home.
Gene-negative
It is almost as inconceivable for people to learn that they are not in
harm's way. Identities have been built around being "at risk":
commitments abandoned, lives led in the fast lane. Some people who learn
that they are free of the long-dreaded gene are stunned and unprepared.
Suddenly they are ordinary; vulnerable now to other diseases, responsible
for their lives as never before. Friends and relatives who had sacrificed
for them in the past may feel cheated and vengeful or disturbed to find
themselves deprived of their role of tending to an invalid. Some people
describe "survivor guilt," especially if they have a sibling or close
relative who tested positive for the gene (N.S. Wexler and M.R. Hayden,
personal communications). These people and their families also need help
-- preferably before test results are given, because their dilemmas are
foreseeable -- and long-term follow-up afterward.
The need for counseling
My conviction, stemming from my experience directing the presymptomatic
testing program for Huntington's disease at Columbia University and talking
with colleagues in other programs, is that many people who come for
presymptomatic testing would benefit from intensive counseling, sometimes
in lieu of the test itself. Most people who come for the test have never
had any counseling or therapy. They usually know the rudimentary genetics
of the disease, taught them by their parents, and have not interacted with
genetic counselors. They also do not consider themselves "psychologically
ill." If they do consider seeking help, many cannot afford therapy (which
is rarely reimbursed by insurance coverage) or they complain that the
therapists know less about the illness than they do and are not helpful.
Being at risk has had a profound effect on most people's lives. They have
had an ill parent, with whom they may or may not have had contact, and
perhaps other relatives, including siblings, who have suffered from
Huntington's disease. Most have made an excellent adaption to their
circumstances, but almost all welcome the opportunity to talk to someone
knowledgeable about their experience.
For people at risk, daily life can be like living in a city in a state of
siege -- never knowing if or where the next bomb will drop. People do a
superb job of coping, but the reality is that they have a 1 in 2 chance of
dying of a degenerative disease of the brain. No matter how adaptive their
coping mechanisms may be, this reality never changes. The genetic test
gives people a crystal ball to see the future: will the city be free of
bombs from now on or will a bomb crash into their home, killing them and
jeopardizing their children?
The current linkage test for Huntington's disease provides some built-in
brakes on the testing process while tissue samples are being collected and
relatives are being neurologically examined. Also, parents and other
relatives usually know that a person is being tested, as their samples are
being used to conduct the test. This gives others the opportunity to make
their feelings known about the test, and in some instances even stop the
test from proceeding if they are sufficiently opposed -- a power that
causes internecine warfare in some families.
Once a direct test for the gene is possible, testing can be done with much
greater privacy. This has advantages and disadvantages. Fewer people in
the family are disrupted by having to be neurologically examined, but there
is also less opportunity for family members to intervene. There is even
the danger of surreptitiously testing a sample from some unsuspecting
person who has not given permission: for example, a spouse might want the
other spouse tested in order to decide about children. A test should never
be conducted without fully informed consent, but it will be technically
feasible to do so in the future, whereas now it is not. Some family
members have already expressed interest in the possibility of
surreptitiously testing spouses or children.
The biggest danger of direct testing for the Huntington's disease allele
will be to speed up the testing process and short- circuit counseling.
There is already a trend toward fewer counseling sessions. Often
counselors in genetic testing programs are not trained for psychotherapy or
in-depth counseling and cannot see the need for proceeding beyond the
cursory establishment that a person wants this test, like any other test.
Counseling can be uncomfortable, even painful at times, when people are
forced to consider the possibilities before them. But it is better to
consider them before testing than afterward. Frequently people at risk
have built up layers of protection to cope with their risk situation.
These must be peeled back enough to explore the potential impact of the
test information. And each client must be understood individually.
Quality assurance
Another problem is that even when there are good protocols for providing
testing, as there are for presymptomatic testing for Huntington's disease
(22, 23), there is no mechanism for enforcing the protocols or for
supervising compliance. A testing protocol has been developed under the
auspices of the Huntington's Disease Society of America. This protocol
should be used by all who provide presymptomatic and prenatal testing for
Huntington's disease. With no monitoring or oversight, one is relegated to
relying on the goodwill of colleagues and the fear of public pressure.
There are not adequate safeguards in such a critical realm. There have
already been egregious errors when protocols have not been followed.
Government regulations should cover laboratory proficiency testing,
including genetic linkage analysis. And professional organizations or some
other regulatory body should supervise and enforce the more complex areas
of counseling, genetic and psychological, which are essential. It is
particularly difficult to obtain reimbursement for the long-term counseling
critical to helping someone cope with a positive diagnosis.
LESSONS FOR THE FUTURE
The lessons of the Huntington's disease experience for other testing
programs are numerous. Perhaps Huntington's disease testing emphasizes
most of all that each individual is unique and the correct solution for
that person must be sought. The test for the HD gene raises critical
issues with respect to the right of people to know genetic information,
their right not to know, and the right of privacy for minors. These rights
hold true in testing for any disease, even when intervention is possible.
Genetic testing programs must be designed to take into account the specific
attributes of the disease for which testing is being offered. Testing
programs should increasingly be coupled with therapy programs, for example,
for familial polyposis. The testing of minors is advantageous when early
intervention is the most effective prevention or treatment; careful
attention must be given to designing appropriate informed consent
permissions for minors.
Genetic counseling should also include a discussion of the potential
economic and social ramifications of learning diagnostic information.
People who are identified to have a high risk for developing certain
disorders may be also at high risk for losing health and life insurance.
In certain circumstances, just being at risk for the disorder (such as for
Huntington's disease) is sufficient to make someone uninsurable; there may
be nothing to lose. If individuals are presymptomatically diagnosed with
breast or colon cancer, for example, they may be in serious financial
trouble if they are deprived of the very insurance they need to carry out
preventive monitoring, surgery, or treatment. Issues of potential job
discrimination and social stigmatization must be part of the counseling.
In all cases, truly informed consent, including a full psychological
appreciation of the ramifications of the information, must be the principle
upon which testing programs are designed. Information should not be
foisted on someone without permission. And if it is requested, it must be
phrased in such a way as to be maximally useful.
Widespread genetic testing for cystic fibrosis will likely begin soon, and
genetic testing for other disorders, including cancers caused by mutations
in the P53 gene, breast and colon cancers, fibrocystic kidney disease, and
many more, is in the offing. We have a tremendous amount to learn about
people's responses to genetic tests and how they use the information
provided. We also have a dismaying dearth of providers: there are fewer
than 2,000 medical geneticists and genetic counselors in the U.S. (24). At
current rates of training, the number will not double for 10 years (24).
Testing should be provided in a setting that is maximally conducive to
learning, both for those undergoing testing and those concerned with
providing the best services. The psychology and psychological reactions of
people seeking and receiving genetic information are complex, manifold, and
not to be assumed without research. Pilot projects should be supported and
follow- up studies conducted to study how information is utilized and what
psychological and medical impact it has on those receiving it.
Above all, we do not wish to compound the difficulties families coping with
genetic disease are already enduring. All must be served, veterans and
novices to genetic information alike, in a way that allows each to take
full advantage of the potential benefits of such information and protects
them from harm.
-- FJ
REFERENCES
1. Sophocles, Oedipus the King. (1957) In Eight Great Tragedies pp.
65-66, Mentor Books, New York.
2. Ball, D.M., and Harper, P.S. (1992) Presymptomatic testing for
late-onset genetic disorders: lessons from Huntington's disease. FASEB J.
6,
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