BMC Medical Genomics (Jul 2008)

My sister's keeper?: genomic research and the identifiability of siblings

  • Kohane Isaac S,
  • Schmidt Brian,
  • Cassa Christopher A,
  • Mandl Kenneth D

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1755-8794-1-32
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
p. 32

Abstract

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Abstract Background Genomic sequencing of SNPs is increasingly prevalent, though the amount of familial information these data contain has not been quantified. Methods We provide a framework for measuring the risk to siblings of a patient's SNP genotype disclosure, and demonstrate that sibling SNP genotypes can be inferred with substantial accuracy. Results Extending this inference technique, we determine that a very low number of matches at commonly varying SNPs is sufficient to confirm sib-ship, demonstrating that published sequence data can reliably be used to derive sibling identities. Using HapMap trio data, at SNPs where one child is homozygotic major, with a minor allele frequency ≤ 0.20, (N = 452684, 65.1%) we achieve 91.9% inference accuracy for sibling genotypes. Conclusion These findings demonstrate that substantial discrimination and privacy risks arise from use of inferred familial genomic data.