Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from USA, Canada and Europe directly to your inbox.

    What's Hot

    At least 5 killed and dozens others are hospitalized as tornadoes and dangerous storms tear through the South and Midwest | CNN

    April 1, 2023

    Plymouth boss ‘like kid at Christmas’ for final

    April 1, 2023

    Column: Ron DeSantis’ response to Trump’s indictment is a frightening new low even for him

    April 1, 2023
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    West ObserverWest Observer
    • Home
    • News
      1. United States
      2. Europe
      3. Canada
      4. Latin America
      5. Australia
      6. World
      7. View All

      UN Food Chief: Billions Needed to Avert Unrest, Starvation

      April 1, 2023

      Pakistani Village Seen as Model of Climate Resilience

      April 1, 2023

      Taiwan President Visits Guatemala

      April 1, 2023

      US To Open Embassy in Vanuatu

      April 1, 2023

      Tornadoes rip through the southern and midwestern US, leaving several dead and injured

      April 1, 2023

      Belarra presses Díaz one day before launching his candidacy: “It is enough that this afternoon Podemos and Sumar sign a declaration”

      April 1, 2023

      Psychological advice line of SNS 24 helped more than 210 thousand people

      April 1, 2023

      Emmanuel Macron’s visit to China: “We Europeans are building the future”, insists European Commissioner Thierry Breton

      April 1, 2023

      Factory explosion survivor, on fire, fell into chocolate vat

      April 1, 2023

      Federal minimum wage, taxes on alcohol: Here’s what’s changing in Canada April 1

      April 1, 2023

      Interim RCMP commissioner would support Criminal Code changes for stricter gun laws

      April 1, 2023

      Vancouver Canucks winger Andrei Kuzmenko skips warm-up over Pride jersey

      April 1, 2023

      Pope Francis is discharged and leaves the hospital saying: “I’m still alive”

      April 1, 2023

      Pope Francis is discharged and leaves the hospital saying: “I’m still alive”

      April 1, 2023

      what’s up the streamings in april

      April 1, 2023

      What happens in the human brain when people tell lies

      April 1, 2023

      The difference of opinion of the two theorists over the secret of “hosh-made chips”

      April 1, 2023

      The French League prohibits stopping matches for “breaking the fast” of fasting people

      April 1, 2023

      Are Republicans heading towards a “third option” in the elections?

      April 1, 2023

      A Sudanese Ramadan series raises controversy about “Islamists”

      April 1, 2023

      Tornadoes rip through the southern and midwestern US, leaving several dead and injured

      April 1, 2023

      Pope Francis is discharged and leaves the hospital saying: “I’m still alive”

      April 1, 2023

      Belarra presses Díaz one day before launching his candidacy: “It is enough that this afternoon Podemos and Sumar sign a declaration”

      April 1, 2023

      Psychological advice line of SNS 24 helped more than 210 thousand people

      April 1, 2023
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Sports
    • Travel
    • More
      • Entertainment
      • Videos
    en English
    en Englishes Españolfr Françaisde Deutschhi हिन्दीit Italianoja 日本語pt Portuguêsru Русскийzh-CN 简体中文
    West ObserverWest Observer
    Home » 100,000 newborn babies will have their genomes sequenced in the UK. It could have big implications for child medicine | CNN

    100,000 newborn babies will have their genomes sequenced in the UK. It could have big implications for child medicine | CNN

    March 19, 2023No Comments Politics
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email



    CNN
     — 

    The UK is set to begin sequencing the genomes of 100,000 newborn babies later this year. It will be the largest study of its kind, mapping the babies’ complete set of genetic instructions, with potentially profound implications for child medicine.

    The £105 million ($126 million) Newborn Genomes Programme will screen for around 200 rare but treatable genetic conditions, with the aim of curtailing untold pain and anxiety for babies and their families, who sometimes struggle to receive a diagnosis through conventional testing. By accelerating the diagnostic process, earlier treatment of infants could prevent many severe conditions from ever developing.

    The study would see roughly one in 12 newborn babies in England and Wales screened on a voluntary basis over two years. It will operate as an extension of current newborn testing, with the findings intended to inform policymakers, who could pave the way for sequencing to become more commonplace.

    Nevertheless, the project has raised many longstanding ethical questions around genetics, consent, data privacy, and priorities within infant healthcare.

    The health game-changers of the last 500 years

    In the UK, like many other countries, newborn babies are screened for a number of treatable conditions through a small blood spot sample. Also known as the heel prick test, this method has been routine for over 50 years, and today covers nine conditions including sickle cell disease, cystic fibrosis and inherited metabolic diseases.

    “The heel prick is long overdue to be obsolete,” argues Eric Topol, an American cardiologist and professor of molecular medicine at The Scripps Research Institute, who is not connected with the UK sequencing initiative. “It’s very limited and it takes weeks to get the answer. Sometimes, babies that have serious metabolic abnormalities, they’re already being harmed.”

    Some conditions that are tested for have variations that may not register a positive result. The consequences can be life-altering.

    One example is congenital hyperthyroidism, which impacts neurological development and growth and affects “one in 1,500 to 2,000 babies in the UK,” explains Krishna Chatterjee, professor of endocrinology at the University of Cambridge. It is the result of an absent or under-developed thyroid gland and can be treated with the hormone thyroxine, a cheap and routine medicine. But if treatment doesn’t begin “within the first six months of life, some of those deleterious neurodevelopmental consequences cannot be prevented or reversed.”

    The Newborn Genomes Programme will test for one or more forms of congenital hypothyroidism that are not picked up by the heel prick test. “At a stroke, you can make a diagnosis, and that can be game changing – or life changing – for that child,” Chatterjee says.

    The program is led by Genomics England, part of the UK Department of Health and Social Care. Along with its partners, it has carried out a variety of preparatory studies, including a large-scale public consultation. A feasibility study is currently underway to assess whether a heel prick, cheek swab or umbilical cord blood will be used for sampling, with the quality of the DNA sample determining the final choice.

    Genomics England says that each of the 200 conditions that will be screened for has been selected because there is evidence it is caused by genetic variants; it has a debilitating effect; early or pre-symptomatic treatment has a life-improving impact; and treatment is available for all through the UK’s National Health Service (NHS).

    Richard Scott, chief medical officer and deputy CEO at Genomics England, says the program aims to return screening results to families in two weeks, and estimates at least one in 200 babies will receive a diagnosis.

    Contracts for sequencing are still to be confirmed, although one contender is American biotech company Illumina. Chief scientist David Bentley says the company has reduced the price of its sequencing 1,000-fold compared to its first genome 15 years ago, and can now sequence the whole human genome for $200.

    Bentley argues that early diagnosis via genome sequencing is cost effective in the long term: “People get sick, they get tested using one test after another, and that cost mounts up. (Sequencing) the genome is much cheaper than a diagnostic odyssey.”

    Illumina equipment in a sequencing laboratory. The cost of sequencing the human genome has fallen significantly in the last 15 years, says the company.

    But while some barriers to genetic screening have fallen, many societal factors are still in play.

    Feedback from a public consultation ahead of the UK project’s launch was generally positive, although some participants voiced concerns that religious views could affect uptake, and a few expressed skepticism and mistrust about current scientific developments in healthcare, according to a report on its findings.

    Frances Flinter, emeritus professor of clinical genetics and Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust and a member of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, described the program as a “step into the unknown” in a statement to Science Media Centre in December 2022, reacting to the launch of the program.

    “We must not race to use this technology before both the science and ethics are ready,” she said at the time. “This research program could provide new and important evidence on both. We just hope the question of whether we should be doing this at all is still open.”

    Genome sequencing has raised many philosophical and ethical questions. If you could have aspects of your medical future laid ahead of you, would you want that? What if you were predisposed to an incurable disease? Could that knowledge alone impact your quality of life?

    “People don’t generally understand deterministic or fatalistic-type results versus probabilistic, so it does require real teaching of participants,” says Topol. In other words, just because someone has a genetic predisposition to a certain condition, it doesn’t guarantee that they will develop the disease.

    Nevertheless, sequencing newborn babies has made some of those questions more acute.

    “One of the tenets of genomics and genomics testing is the importance of maintaining people’s autonomy to make their own decisions,” says Scott, highlighting the optional nature of the program.

    “We’ve been quite cautious,” he stresses. “All of the conditions that we’re looking for are ones where we think we can make a really substantial impact on those children’s lives.”

    It is investing maximally in the long-term future …

    David Bentley, chief scientist, Illumina

    Parents-to-be will be invited to participate in the program at their 20-week scan, and confirm their decision after the child’s birth.

    “These will be parents, most of whom won’t have any history of a genetic condition, or any reason to worry about one. So it will be an additional challenge for them to appreciate what the value might be for their family,” says Amanda Pichini, clinical lead for genetic counseling at Genomics England.

    Part of Pichini’s remit is to ensure equal access to the program and to produce representative data. While diversity comes in many forms, she says – including economic background and rural versus urban location – enlisting ethnically diverse participants is one objective.

    “(There) has been a lack of data from other ethnic groups around the world, compared to Caucasians,” says Bentley. “As a result, the diagnostic rates for people from those backgrounds is lower. There are more variants from those backgrounds that we don’t know anything about – we can’t interpret them.”

    If genomics is to serve humanity equally, genome data needs to reflect all of it. Data diversity “isn’t an issue that any one country can solve,” says Pichini.

    Other countries are also pursuing sequencing programs and reference genomes – a set of genes assembled by scientists to represent a population, for the purpose of comparison. Australia is investing over $500 million AUS (around $333 million) into its genome program; the “All of Us” program is engaged in a five-year mission to sequence 1 million genomes in the US; and in the Middle East, the United Arab Emirates is seeking its own reference genome to investigate genetic diseases disproportionately affecting people in the region, where Illumina’s recently opened Dubai office will add local sequencing capacity.

    Richard Scott of Genomics England says he hopes findings from the UK will be useful to other countries’ health systems, especially those not in “a strong position to develop the evidence and to support their decisions as well.”

    Sequenced genomes will enter a secure databank using the same model as the National Genomic Research Library, in which they are deidentified and assigned a reference number.

    Researchers from the NHS, universities and pharmaceutical companies can apply for access to the National Genomic Research Library (in some cases for a fee), with applications approved by an independent committee that includes participants who have provided samples. There are plenty of restrictions: data cannot be accessed for insurance or marketing purposes, for example.

    “We think it’s really important to be transparent about that,” says Pichini. “Often, drugs and diagnostics and therapeutics can’t be developed in the NHS on (its) own. We need to have those partnerships.”

    When each child turns 16, they will make their own decision on whether their genomic data should remain in the system. It hasn’t yet been decided if participants can request further investigation of their genome – beyond the scope of newborn screening – at a later date, says Scott.

    After the two-year sampling window closes, a cost-benefit analysis of the program will begin, developing evidence for the UK National Screening Committee which advises the government and NHS on screening policies. It’s a process that could take some time.

    Chatterjee suggests an entire lifetime might be needed to measure the economic savings that would come from early diagnosis of certain diseases, citing the costs of special needs schooling for children and support for adults living with certain rare genetic conditions: “How does that balance against the technical cost of making a diagnosis and then treatment?”

    “I’m quite certain that this cost-benefit equation will balance,” Chatterjee adds.

    Multiple interviewees for this article viewed genome sequencing as an extension of current testing, though stopped short of suggesting it could become standard practice for all newborn babies. Even Topol, a staunch advocate for genomics, does not believe it will become universal. “I don’t think you can mandate something like this,” he says. “We’re going to have an anti-genomic community, let’s face it.”

    Members of the medical community have expressed a variety of concerns about the program’s approach and scope.

    In comments released last December, Angus Clarke, clinical professor at the Institute of Cancer and Genetics at Cardiff University, queried if the program’s whole genome sequencing was driven by a wish to collect more genomic data, rather than improve newborn screening. Louise Fish, chief executive of the Genetic Alliance UK charity, questioned whether following other European nations that are expanding the number of conditions tested through existing bloodspot screening may have “just as great an ability to improve the lives of babies and their families.”

    If genome sequencing becomes the norm, it remains to be seen how it will dovetail with precision medicine in the form of gene therapy, including gene editing. While the cost of sequencing a genome has plummeted, some gene therapies can cost millions of dollars per patient.

    But for hundreds of babies not yet born in England and Wales, diagnosis of rare conditions that have routine treatments will be facilitated by the Newborn Genomes Programme.

    “So much of medicine today is given in later life, and saves people for a few months or years,” says Bentley. “It’s so good to see more opportunity here to make a difference through screening and prevention during the early stages of life.

    “It is investing maximally in the long-term future as a society, by screening all young people and increasing their chances of survival through genetics so they can realize their enormous potential.”

    Source: CNN

    biology biotechnology brand safety-nsf health issues brand safety-nsf sensitive business business and industry sectors children continents and regions demographic groups diseases and disorders domestic alerts domestic-health and science domestic-international news economy and trade England Europe families and children family members and relatives genetic screening genetics government organizations - intl health and medical iab-biological sciences iab-biotech and biomedical industry iab-business and finance iab-children's health iab-diseases and conditions iab-family and relationships iab-genetics iab-healthy living iab-industries iab-medical health iab-medical tests iab-parenting iab-parenting babies and toddlers iab-pharmaceutical drugs iab-pharmaceutical industry iab-science infants and toddlers international alerts international-health and science medical biotechnology medical diagnostics medical fields and specialties National Health Service northern europe pharmaceutical industry pharmaceuticals pharmaceuticals and prescription drugs population and demographics science screening and testing Society United Kingdom
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    At least 5 killed and dozens others are hospitalized as tornadoes and dangerous storms tear through the South and Midwest | CNN

    April 1, 2023

    Column: Ron DeSantis’ response to Trump’s indictment is a frightening new low even for him

    April 1, 2023

    Russia runs the UN Security Council this month. Ukraine says it’s the worst April Fools’ joke | CNN

    April 1, 2023

    UN Food Chief: Billions Needed to Avert Unrest, Starvation

    April 1, 2023

    ‘This is not a zoo’ – Why sex workers are protesting in Amsterdam | CNN

    April 1, 2023

    World’s best restaurants honored in culinary awards | CNN

    April 1, 2023
    Don't Miss

    Column: Ron DeSantis’ response to Trump’s indictment is a frightening new low even for him

    Politics April 1, 2023

    Among my friends, there’s a lot of enthusiasm for locking up President Trump and throwing…

    Tornadoes rip through the southern and midwestern US, leaving several dead and injured

    April 1, 2023

    Pope Francis is discharged and leaves the hospital saying: “I’m still alive”

    April 1, 2023

    Belarra presses Díaz one day before launching his candidacy: “It is enough that this afternoon Podemos and Sumar sign a declaration”

    April 1, 2023
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Our Picks

    Psychological advice line of SNS 24 helped more than 210 thousand people

    April 1, 2023

    Emmanuel Macron’s visit to China: “We Europeans are building the future”, insists European Commissioner Thierry Breton

    April 1, 2023

    War in Ukraine, live: two French volunteers killed in ten days

    April 1, 2023

    Sergei Rachmaninoff: Is that what the Russian soul sounds like?

    April 1, 2023

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from USA, Canada and Europe directly to your inbox.

    About Us
    About Us

    Your #1 source for all the website news, follow USA, Europe and Canada News. Latest reports about business, politics and entertainment.

    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Email Us: [email protected]

    Facebook Twitter YouTube LinkedIn
    Our Picks

    At least 5 killed and dozens others are hospitalized as tornadoes and dangerous storms tear through the South and Midwest | CNN

    April 1, 2023

    Plymouth boss ‘like kid at Christmas’ for final

    April 1, 2023

    Column: Ron DeSantis’ response to Trump’s indictment is a frightening new low even for him

    April 1, 2023
    Newsletter

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from USA, Canada and Europe directly to your inbox.

    © 2023 West Observer. All Rights Reserved.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact
    • Khaleej Voice

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.