Abstract

Children with rare and common diseases now undergo whole genome sequencing (WGS) in clinical and research contexts. Parents sometimes request access to their child's raw genomic data, to pursue their own analyses or for onward sharing with health professionals and researchers. These requests raise legal, ethical, and practical issues for professionals and parents alike. The advent of widespread WGS in pediatrics occurs in a context where privacy and data protection law remains focused on giving individuals control-oriented rights with respect to their personal information. Acting in their child's stead and in their best interests, parents are generally the ones who will be exercising these informational rights on behalf of the child. In this paper, we map the contours of parental authority to access their child's raw genomic data. We consider three use cases: hospital-based researchers, healthcare professionals acting in a clinical-diagnostic capacity, and “pure” academic researchers at a public institution. Our research seeks to answer two principal questions: Do parents have a right of access to their child's raw WGS data? If so, what are the limits of this right? Primarily focused on the laws of Ontario, Canada's most populous province, with a secondary focus on Canada's three other most populous provinces (Quebec, British Columbia, and Alberta) and the European Union, our principal findings include (1) parents have a general right of access to information about their children, but that the access right is more capacious in the clinical context than in the research context; (2) the right of access extends to personal data in raw form; (3) a consideration of the best interests of the child may materially limit the legal rights of parents to access data about their child; (4) the ability to exercise rights of access are transferred from parents to children when they gain decision-making capacity in both the clinical and research contexts, but with more nuance in the former. With these findings in mind, we argue that professional guidelines, which are concerned with obligations to interpret and return results, may assist in furthering a child's best interests in the context of legal access rights. We conclude by crafting recommendations for healthcare professionals in the clinical and research contexts when faced with a parental request for a child's raw genomic data.

Highlights

  • Children with rare and common diseases undergo whole genome sequencing (WGS) in clinical and research contexts

  • As the objects of professional ethical obligations, we examined the professional guidelines of the American College of Medical Genetics, the Canadian College of Medical Genetics, and the European Society of Human Genetics to understand the relationship of access rights to professional obligations

  • Where parents request access to information from adolescents, health information custodians may be required to determine if the child is capable of consenting to access before allowing parents to do so

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Summary

Introduction

Children with rare and common diseases undergo whole genome sequencing (WGS) in clinical and research contexts. Parents sometimes request access to their child’s raw genomic data, to pursue their own analyses or for onward sharing with health professionals and researchers. These requests raise legal, ethical, and practical issues for both professionals and parents. WGS may reveal information about a child’s future health, which raises the issue of safeguarding the child’s ethical right to an open future (Feinberg, 1980), viz. Their ability to decide for themselves as adults whether or not to be tested for certain conditions This raises the following questions: Should children be tested for adult-onset conditions? This raises the following questions: Should children be tested for adult-onset conditions? Should secondary or incidental findings from WGS be reported to children?

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