| Literature DB >> 25855867 |
Elena Bravo, Alessia Calzolari, Paola De Castro, Laurence Mabile, Federica Napolitani, Anna Maria Rossi, Anne Cambon-Thomsen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many biomedical publications refer to data obtained from collections of biosamples. Sharing such bioresources (biological samples, data, and databases) is paramount for the present governance of research. Recognition of the effort involved in generating, maintaining, and sharing high quality bioresources is poorly organized, which does not encourage sharing. At publication level, the recognition of such resources is often neglected and/or highly heterogeneous. This is a true handicap for the traceability of bioresource use. The aim of this article is to propose, for the first time, a guideline for reporting bioresource use in research articles, named CoBRA: Citation of BioResources in journal Articles.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25855867 PMCID: PMC4331335 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-015-0266-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
The BRIF initiative [1,12,19]
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| The BRIF initiative is developing a framework to recognize and measure the use and impact of biological resources in health research. The BRIF working group consists of 135 members from 22 countries, most of whom are either European (86) or North-American (31). A broad range of experts are participating, including biobankers, clinicians, genomic/genetic scientists, epidemiologists, computer scientists, jurists, lawyers, ethicists, experts in information, bibliometricists, and journal editors; they are represented in different BRIF subgroups. | |
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| • Promoting the sharing of data and biological samples |
| • Recognizing the work (human resources/infrastructure) involved in setting up and maintaining a valid bioresource | |
| • Providing more complete information on the bioresources used in research | |
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| • Standardizing the citation of bioresources in scientific articles in order to trace their use on the web |
| • Creating a tool (BRIF indicator) to establish the frequency of a bioresource’s use and evaluate its impact based on quantitative metrics and on the use of a unique digital resource identifier (ID) | |
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| • | Exploring and assessing existing and emerging technical solutions suitable for bioresource identification, as well as addressing key related questions, including what to identify (biobank projects, sample collections, databases, datasets, registries) and which body or bodies should be responsible for assigning bioresource IDs |
| • | Identifying potential factors to take into account when calculating the BRIF indicator |
| • | Developing an appropriate set of recommendations (BRIF procedure) to consider in developing and implementing bioresource access and sharing policies |
| • | Relating with scientific journal editors to standardize bioresource citation in journal articles and amending the corresponding editorial guidelines |
| • | Communication and dissemination of information related to the BRIF initiative |
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| To support the adoption of bioresource citation standards, BRIF participates in two pilot projects: | |
| • The creation of the open access journal Open Journal of Bioresources [ | |
| • Testing the use of a unique bioresource ID in the research community, attributed through the Public Population Project in Genomics and Society [ | |
CoBRA checklist for the citation of bioresources used* in scientific journal articles
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| 1 | Indicate whether the work has used one or more bioresources; specify the number of bioresources if relevant | Adapt according to the number of words allowed |
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| 2 | Indicate that the work has used one or more bioresources; specify the type | The types of bioresources include: data, samples and data, database, registry |
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| 3 | Report each individual bioresource used to perform the study: | The format of the reference is detailed in item 6 in the section “References” |
| By their name and other ID, if extant | The bioresource name should be the original name as reported in | ||
| By a single bibliographic reference | Official documents such as Material Transfer Agreement (MTA) and Data Transfer Agreement (DTA); the name should be reported in the original language without translation | ||
| Specify any relevant characteristics of the bioresource, such as sample number and type of biospecimens, if this information is not available from the bioresource reference | |||
| Number of accesses can be also reported here, for instance, as the MTA/DTA registration number associated with each access; if the dates of actual bioresource availability for the user (e.g., reception of samples) are distant from those in the MTA signature, this can be reported here | |||
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| 4 | Indicate the relevance of the bioresource(s) used for the study (Optional) | |
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| 5 | Standard rules should apply | |
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| 6 | Cite each bioresource as a reference as follows: | Each citation includes three fields: Identification/Institution/Access |
| ID/Bioresource Name (acronym if available)/organization or network partnership, membership (optional)/Number of access(es), Date of last access; [BIORESOURCE] Specifications for ID: Unique ID can be DOI, catalogue number, or the name only If the only ID is the name then add Town and Country | The “use” of the bioresource is distinguished within the citation by adding “[BIORESOURCE]” at the end of the reference | ||
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| If the bioresource requires mentioning | |||
| When the bioresource is a physical resource such as a biobank or collection, the number of accesses should be specified, in addition to the date of last access. These data will generally correspond to the data signature of the MTA/DTA | |||
| When the bioresource is a digital resource such as a database, dataset, or registry, only the last access should be reported (see Box 1, Example 5) | |||
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| 7 | Standard rules should apply | |
| Providing samples or data is not sufficient to justify authorship | |||
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| 8 | Standard rules should apply |
*In the case of bioresources not used as a source of material for the study, but only referred to, follow the citation format: ID/Bioresource Name (acronym if available)/organization or network partnership, membership (optional) (see Box 1, Example 5).