| Literature DB >> 25361573 |
Zhaochen Wang, Di Zhang, Vincent H Ng, Reidar Lie1, Xiaomei Zhai.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: China has become a global player in the field of biosamples research and analysis of genetic data. The Beijing Genomics Institute is a genetics factory where enormous amounts of biosamples/data from all over the world are being analyzed. Most of the global bioethics discussions focused on research conducted by scientists from industrialized countries with subjects from poorer countries. Today, however, samples from industrialized nations are being analyzed in China on an unprecedented scale. This means that one should not just focus on bioethics developments in western countries, but also should pay attention to the situation in China. Under this era of rapid advancement in genomics, reassessing the conventionally accepted bioethical principles is strongly needed. DISCUSSION: In this paper, we will analyze the case of BGI in the context of the Chinese regulatory system in order to identify methods to regulate genetic research more effectively and to strengthen BGI's role in international collaborative research projects. Three main issues concerning sample collection and samples/data management are addressed. Firstly, an ambiguous definition of research, which does not specifically include biosamples/data, when applied to genetic research, may cause confusion and leave loopholes in governance. Secondly, the current regulations do not provide sufficient guidelines on the details of what information to present to prospective subjects, and how to combine informed consent with strategies of re-consent, withdrawal and feedback from research. Finally, the existing regulations do not adequately address issues of genetic privacy and data protection.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25361573 PMCID: PMC4226894 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6939-15-79
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Noted research of BGI under the blueprint
| Noted research | Classification under the blueprint |
|---|---|
| HGP, HapMap, 1000 Genomes, ICGC Project | Scientific research |
| BGI & Merck 2011, BGI & Danish 2011, BGI & START 2013 | Scientific research, sequencing & analyzing service, further collaborations |
| The China National Genebank (Shenzhen) | Scientific research and further collaborations |
| PNGT in hospitals, | Medical/clinical services |
| The 1000 Rare Disease Project with CHOP | Scientific research, medical/clinical services with potential individual services in the future |
| IQ research | Scientific research with unclear applications |
| Cloud storage to manage data crossing boundaries | Unclear |
Laws and regulations on genetic research in China
| Laws & Regulations | |
|---|---|
| The Interim Procedures for Human Genetic Resources Management by NHFPC & MST in 1998 | Covers research, development and transfer of genetic materials, rules and procedures of application and approval; |
| Requires informed consent from donors and relatives for international collaborations but does not mention IRB review and specific content about informed consent; | |
| States that genetic resources and related information should be protected as state secrets of science and technology, does not mention sample reuse and research information feedback to individual donors. | |
| The Good Clinical Practice by CFDA in 2003 | To ensure that clinic trials of new medicines are scientifically reliable, protect subjects’ right and safety; |
| conforms to | |
| Clear requirement to protect the benefits of subjects by appropriate IRB reviews and informed consent about the clinic trial; | |
| The definition of clinical trial refers research “on human body” that may be literally inapplicable to genetic research; | |
| The requirement of informed consent does not mention particular issues of consent for genetic research, which at least should include consent for future use of samples, feedback and withdrawal from research. | |
| The Ethical Review of Biomedical Research Involving Human Subjects by NHFPC in 2007 | Rules for duties and jurisdictions of IRB, clearly states the constitution of IRB; |
| Stipulates ethical principles of IRB review with standard procedures; | |
| Clearly requires protection of privacy, subjects can quit at any time without any condition, re-consent shall be obtained if research protocol has been changed; | |
| The definition of research still literally problematic in genetic research context; | |
| Not provides details about feedback and withdrawal method that fits genetic research. | |
| The Tort Liability Law of the People’s Republic of China by NPC in 2010 | Protects legitimate rights and interests of civil subjects in general, explicitly ensures citizens’ right to life, to health as well as the right of privacy. Especially in the chapter of compensation for medical damage it notes health care organizations and medical professionals should protect patients’ privacy and shall bear the liability for tort if patients get damaged due to privacy leaking or the disclosure of patients’ medical records. |