Literature DB >> 17998074

"Omics" research, monetization of intellectual property and fragmentation of knowledge: can clinical epidemiology strengthen integrative research?

Miquel Porta1, Ildefonso Hernández-Aguado, Blanca Lumbreras, Marta Crous-Bou.   

Abstract

An analysis of the contributions of "omics technologies" to human health and clinical care needs to address the relationships between internal issues (e.g., methodological shortcomings in "omics" research and clinical biology) and external influences. Among the latter, monetization of intellectual property (IP) appears to be a powerful force favoring methodological limitations and an excessive reductionism and fragmentation of biological knowledge. Following economic successes in other industries (semiconductors, software, and "dot-coms"), monetization of IP tries to market small fragments of big research "puzzles"; the strategy seems partly responsible for the biotech industry having underperformed methodological, clinical, and economic expectations. Hence, internal, purely scientific reasons can hardly explain failures in the application of long-proven principles of clinical epidemiology to the discovery and validation of diagnostic and prognostic tests. Nevertheless, this paper also sketches methodological proposals that may help integrate microbiological, clinical, and environmental evidence. Clinical and epidemiological reasoning, knowledge, and methods need to be applied on a much wider scale than until now by "omics" studies that aim at making inferences relevant for human beings. Rather than adopting the values and norms of "science business," "omics research" could apply a diversity of clinicoepidemiological models favoring integrative research.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17998074     DOI: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2007.06.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol        ISSN: 0895-4356            Impact factor:   6.437


  5 in total

1.  Timing of blood extraction in epidemiologic and proteomic studies: results and proposals from the PANKRAS II Study.

Authors:  Miquel Porta; José Pumarega; Olga Ferrer-Armengou; Tomàs López; Joan Alguacil; Núria Malats; Esteve Fernàndez
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2007-07-18       Impact factor: 8.082

2.  Assessing the social meaning, value and implications of research in genomics.

Authors:  Blanca Lumbreras; Miquel Porta; Ildefonso Hernández-Aguado
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2007-09       Impact factor: 3.710

3.  There are good clinical, scientific, and social reasons to strengthen links between biomedical and environmental research.

Authors:  Miquel Porta; Laura N Vandenberg
Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol       Date:  2019-03-21       Impact factor: 6.437

4.  The temporal and challenging faces of integration in medical education: The fate of pharmacology.

Authors:  Francis I Achike
Journal:  Indian J Pharmacol       Date:  2011-05       Impact factor: 1.200

5.  Promoting scientific collaboration and education in cardiovascular-renal medicine: EURECAM: An ERA-EDTA-based working group.

Authors:  Adrian Covic; Danilo Fliser; David Goldsmith; Bengt Lindholm; Gerard London; Alberto Martinez; Gultekin Suleymanlar; Andrzej Wiecek; Carmine Zoccali
Journal:  NDT Plus       Date:  2009-09-10
  5 in total

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