| Literature DB >> 25126104 |
Susan E Wallace1, Neil M Walker2, Jane Elliott3.
Abstract
Population-based, prospective longitudinal cohort studies are considering the issues surrounding returning findings to individuals as a result of genomic and other medical research studies. While guidance is being developed for clinical settings, the process is less clear for those conducting longitudinal research. This paper discusses work conducted on behalf of The UK Cohort and Longitudinal Study Enhancement Resource programme (CLOSER) to examine consent requirements, process considerations and specific examples of potential findings in the context of the 1958 British Birth cohort. Beyond deciding which findings to return, there are questions of whether re-consent is needed and the possible impact on the study, how the feedback process will be managed, and what resources are needed to support that process. Recommendations are made for actions a cohort study should consider taking when making vital decisions regarding returning findings. Any decisions need to be context-specific, arrived at transparently, communicated clearly, and in the best interests of both the participants and the study.Entities:
Keywords: Ethics; Individual genetic research findings; Longitudinal population cohort; Policy
Year: 2014 PMID: 25126104 PMCID: PMC4131774 DOI: 10.1186/1742-7622-11-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Themes Epidemiol ISSN: 1742-7622
Options for routes through which cohort can make policy decisions on which findings to return
| Only return findings currently used in clinical practice | Clear utility for participants; no need for additional decision making body | Need to keep abreast of changes in clinical practice |
| Create own expert committee to decide upon which findings to return | Study-specific; greater control over decision making process | Potentially resource intensive (i.e., funds to staff/maintain committee, time donated by members) |
| Join other cohorts to form a joint committee | Greater combined expertise; shared costs | If studies are not similar, decisions may be divisive or not useful |
| Rely on the committee of another cohort | Inexpensive; no need for additional decision making body | Decisions may not be specific enough for own cohort; no power to oversee/direct decision making process |
| Rely on resources (i.e., lists or databases) created by other expert groups | Based on the latest evidence; freely-available resources now available | Data may not be specific enough or appropriate for cohort; if fee-based, could be expensive; need time/expertise to apply their data to own cohort |