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« Polling on science in America | Main | Infectious cancer »
Friday
Oct232009

The ethics of biobanking

The University of Leuven hosted two lectures on biobanking today, one by Hainaut from the International Agency for Research on Cancer and the other by Juhl from the biobanking company Indivumed.

Biobanking is a tricky ethical area, with little consensus and vague law. Who owns the material taken from a patient? The patient? The hospital? The surgeon? If someone wants to use the material, what is the default position? Should the patient have to provide consent or is consent assumed unless the patient opts out? Does the patient even have the right to opt out at a latter time point? Hainaut made the case that there is a moral duty on every person to allow access to their biological samples for the good of humanity. His example was that a excised breast cancer not only belongs to that woman, but also to all other women who may develop breast cancer in the future.

This is an attractive argument but has flaws. If the information generated goes into the public sphere, such that new treatments can be developed and accessed, it may be reasonable to use the moral argument, in the same way that organ donation as the default option can be argued on moral grounds. However, to me this argument is flawed if the information generated does not go into the public sphere. If the information is not published (a secretive researcher or company keeping back information for potential future uses) or if it is published with restrictions on use (ie, patented) that information is not open to all of humanity. Isn't it unethical for a biobank to appeal to the moral duty to all of humanity unless legal restrictions are placed on the biobank to ensure that the proceeds of the bank are available to all of humanity? Doesn't informed consent require donors to be told the status of information generated from their samples?

Unfortunately, Hainaut was not able to answer this question when asked, as Juhl (CEO of a biobanking company that only publishes a fraction of the data it generates) jumped in with a rant about for-profit vs not-for-profit. His contention was that every person acts through the personal profit motive, so that whether the biobank made a profit or not didn't matter. His position is that only private companies have the money to put forward to do the research, and they deserve a profit for the research they do. Perhaps, but irrelevant to the ethical question. If the research outcomes are utilitarian then the utilitarian argument should be put to prospective donors - such as DeCode offering all future drugs free of charge to Icelandic people in exchange for access to the medical records and genome of the Icelandic people. Material can be collected for a utilitarian motive using utilitarian appeals, or for a moral motive using moral appeals. What is unethical is to use a moral appeal to collect material destined for a utilitarian purpose.

Hopefully we will see future legislation reflect the ethical considerations of biobanking in more a more thoughtful manner than was presented today. Donations made by the public for the public good should be legally bound to this use. It is illegal for a charity to accept a monetary donation, keep 90% of the money for personal use and spend 10% on charitable works. Likewise it should be illegal for a biobank that accepts material presented as a public donation to only release 10% of the data produced by the donation, and keep 90% to itself.

References (12)

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    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Response: Keir Majarrez
    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Response: Kion Kashefi
    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Response: Kion Kashefi
    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking
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    Response: Jeff Halevy
    Autoimmune Genetics - Immunology, genetics and the scientific method - The ethics of biobanking

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