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Esami genetici al feto: nuovi allarmi

Entrano in voga gli esami genetici sul sangue della mamma per accertare se il figlio è "normale". L'articolo dei ricercatori olandesi si preoccupa: il diritto a non sapere del bambino che fine farà, magari per le malattie che verranno scoperte e che non sareanno ritenute tali da volerlo abortire... e lui una volta nato saprà che andrà incontro a queste malattie magari incurabili? E un'altra preoccupazione viene evidenziata dall'articolo: esercitare un consenso informato da parte delle donne sarà sempre più difficile.
Carlo Bellieni


Non-invasive prenatal testing: ethical issues explored

Autori: Antina de Jong, Wybo J Dondorp, Christine E M de Die-Smulders, Suzanne G M Frints, Guido M W R de Wert

Fonte: European Journal of Human Genetics , 2010;18:272–277
Link a originale: http://www.nature.com/ejhg/journal/v18/n3/abs/ejhg2009203a.html

Abstract

This paper explores the ethical implications of introducing non-invasive prenatal diagnostic tests (NIPD tests) in prenatal screening for foetal abnormalities. NIPD tests are easy and safe and can be performed early in pregnancy. Precisely because of these features, it is feared that informed consent may become more difficult, that both testing and selective abortion will become ‘normalized’, and that there will be a trend towards accepting testing for minor abnormalities and non-medical traits as well. In our view, however, the real moral challenge of NIPD testing consists in the possibility of linking up a technique with these features (easy, safe and early) with new genomic technologies that allow prenatal diagnostic testing for a much broader range of abnormalities than is the case in current procedures. An increase in uptake and more selective abortions need not in itself be taken to signal a thoughtless acceptance of these procedures. However, combining this with considerably enlarging the scope of NIPD testing will indeed make informed consent more difficult and challenge the notion of prenatal screening as serving reproductive autonomy. If broad NIPD testing includes later-onset diseases, the ‘right not to know’ of the future child will become a new issue in the debate about prenatal screening. With regard to the controversial issue of selective abortion, it may make a morally relevant difference that after NIPD testing, abortion can be done early. A lower moral status may be attributed to the foetus at that moment, given the dominant opinion that the moral status of the foetus progressively increases with its development





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