Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Hum Mutat. 2010 Nov;31(11):1179-84. doi: 10.1002/humu.21339.
More than 1,000 Web-based locus-specific variation databases (LSDBs) are listed on the Website of the Human Genetic Variation Society (HGVS). These individual efforts, which often relate phenotype to genotype, are a valuable source of information for clinicians, patients, and their families, as well as for basic research. The initiators of the Human Variome Project recently recognized that having access to some of the immense resources of unpublished information already present in diagnostic laboratories would provide critical data to help manage genetic disorders. However, there are significant ethical issues involved in sharing these data worldwide. An international working group presents second-generation guidelines addressing ethical issues relating to the curation of human LSDBs that provide information via a Web-based interface. It is intended that these should help current and future curators and may also inform the future decisions of ethics committees and legislators. These guidelines have been reviewed by the Ethics Committee of the Human Genome Organization (HUGO).
超过 1000 个基于网络的基因座特异性变异数据库(LSDB)被列在人类遗传变异协会(HGVS)的网站上。这些个体的努力,通常将表型与基因型联系起来,为临床医生、患者及其家属以及基础研究提供了有价值的信息来源。人类变异组计划的发起者最近认识到,能够访问一些已经存在于诊断实验室中的未发表信息的巨大资源,将提供帮助管理遗传疾病的关键数据。然而,在全球范围内分享这些数据涉及到重大的伦理问题。一个国际工作组提出了第二代指南,解决了与通过基于网络的界面提供信息的人类 LSDB 编目相关的伦理问题。其目的是帮助当前和未来的编目者,也可能为伦理委员会和立法者的未来决策提供信息。这些准则已经经过人类基因组组织(HUGO)伦理委员会的审查。