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24 January 2002Section 60 of the Health and Social Care Act (2001) enables the Secretary of State for Health to approve the use of patient identifiable information, without informed consent, to support essential health service activities that are deemed to be in the public interest and for which it would be impracticable to obtain consent or to use anonymised data. A Patient Information Advisory Group has been set up to consider applications under Section 60 and advise Ministers. It would be very cumbersome for the PIAG to consider separate applications for potentially scores of uses by a large number of different bodies, so the Department of Health has proposed establishing "class regulations" under Section 60 that would enable patient identifiable information to be used without consent for a specific set of six broad but limited purposes. These include, for example, obtaining anonymised data from individual patient records to support medical purposes, and identifying patients who would be suitable subjects to invite to participate a medical research project.
The Department of Health's proposals are currently in a consultation phase, which closes on 31 January. The full set of proposals is set out in a background paper, together with examples of their potential applications. An additional paper sets out illustrative draft regulations along the lines that wouuld be required; these are likely to be modified as a result of the consultation. The consultation asks for respondents' views both on the proposals for class regulations, and on the merits of applications under Section 60 that have been submitted by several bodies including the UK Association of Cancer Registries, the Department of Health Policy Research Programme and the Public Health Laboratory Service.
17 January 2002UK Secretary of State for Health, Alan Milburn, has announced that centres of excellence to be known as "Genetics Knowledge Parks" are to be established in London, Cambridge, the North West, Newcastle, Oxford and Wales. The Genetics Knowledge Parks are part of a £30 million package of initiatives in genetics that also includes increased funding over the next three years to support genetics services, and the designation of two genetic testing laboratories as Reference Laboratories that will develop and assess new tests and provide education and training in genetics for other health professionals. The two laboratories chosen to be Reference Laboratories are the North West Regional Genetics Laboratory in Manchester, and the Wessex Regional Genetics Laboratory in Salisbury.
The Genetics Knowledge Parks encompass a wide range of partnerships and activities. The Cambridge Genetics Knowledge Park will draw together the region's academic, clinical and commercial strengths to assist the transfer of genetic knowledge into health benefits for individuals and the population as a whole, and wealth for the UK. Based in Newcastle, the Northern Genetics Knowledge Park will build up regional strength in post-genomic technologies and their translation into innovative healthcare, and promote genomics education through the activities of the Centre for Life. London's IDEAS Park aims to provide a genetics information service for both health professionals and members of the public, and to promote debate on the understanding of genetics. NoWGEN, the North West Genetic Knowledge Park, will create a multidisciplinary Centre for Applied Genetics that will work on new service models for genetics as well as providing training opportunities and facilitating knowledge transfer. Oxford's Genetics Knowledge Park will focus its activities on the development of molecular genetic testing in clinical practice. The Genetics Knowledge Park in Wales will be built around a consortium of the University of Wales College of Medicine, the University of Cardiff, and the "science discovery centre" Techniquest.
The £11 million allocated for the development of current genetic services throughout England will enable the appointment of 11 new clinical genetics consultants, 28 genetic counsellors and more than 40 genetic scientists, and the purchase of "state of the art" equipment for genetic testing, with the aim of reducing waiting times for consultations and reporting times for test results. Further details of all the new initiatives in genetics are available in a Department of Health press release.
24 January 2002More than 80% of people with a clinical diagnosis of the iron overload disease hereditary haemochromatosis are homozygous for the C282Y mutation in the HFE gene. As about 1 in 200 people in populations of European extraction are homozygous for this allele, there have been calls for population screening followed by prophylactic treatment (regular phlebotomy) for those identified. However, the penetrance of haemochromatosis-associated mutations has been unclear, with some studies suggesting that it is very low. Beutler et al now report a very large study, involving more than 41,000 people, who were tested for C282Y and a second haemochromatosis-associated mutation, H63D, and for symptoms of iron overload [Beutler, E. et al (2002) Lancet 359, 211-218]. A range of classical clinical signs and symptoms associated with haemochromatosis were no more frequent in the 152 individuals who were homozygous (C282Y/C282Y) or compound heterozygotes (C282Y/H63D) for haemochromatosis-associated mutations than they were in matched controls. One exception was a history of liver disease, but this feature was still observed in only 10% of those with genetically-defined haemochromatosis, and there was no evidence that the liver symptoms worsened with age or shortened lifespan. Only one individual had clinically-defined haemochromatosis.
Comment: This large study provides compelling evidence that the penetrance of haemochromatosis-associated genotypes is far lower than would be needed to justify a population screening programme.