| Literature DB >> 26354520 |
Flavio D'Abramo1,2, Jan Schildmann3, Jochen Vollmann4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Appropriate information and consent has been one of the most intensely discussed topics within the context of biobank research. In parallel to the normative debate, many socio-empirical studies have been conducted to gather experiences, preferences and views of patients, healthy research participants and further stakeholders. However, there is scarcity of literature which connects the normative debate about justifications for different consent models with findings gained in empirical research. In this paper we discuss findings of a limited review of socio-empirical research on patients' and healthy research participants' experiences and views regarding consent to biobank research in light of ethical principles for appropriate information and consent.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26354520 PMCID: PMC4563851 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-015-0053-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Research method/Type of publication | |
| Empirical research (qualitative or quantitative) | Case studies |
| Theoretical papers | |
| Comments or opinion papers | |
| Guidelines | |
| Research participants | |
| Research participants have been involved in consent procedure for biobank research | Empirical research on perception or views of public or patients not involved in biobank research |
| Empirical research focusing paediatric genetic research (i.e. view of parents/guardian). | |
| Topic of research | |
| Research participants’ perception or views on consent is central topic of the study | Studies on biobank research participants’ views or attitudes other than consent |
| Papers focusing on disclosure of incidental findings | |
Fig. 1Flow chart literature search
Summary of characteristics and findings of eligible studies
| Authors / Year of Publication | Country | Research participants | Method of data collection | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Robinson et al. 2014 [ | USA | 229 patients; parents/guardian of paediatric patients and family members as controls | Structured interview and open ended questions | Over 25 % of the research participants did not remember that they signed a informed consent document to participate in a genomic study. The majority (54 %) could not correctly identify with whom they had agreed to share their genomic data. Participants felt that they understood enough to make an informed decision. |
| 2. Cervo et al. 2013 [36] | Italy | 430 cancer patients | Structured questionnaire | 36.5 % of research participants indicated that they knew what a biobank was before participating in the study. After the multisource informed consent procedure more than 95 % of patients were aware of participating in a biobank project subsequent to the consent procedure. |
| 3. Oliver et al. 2012 [41] | USA | 229 patients; parents/guardian of paediatric patients and family members as controls | Structured interview and open ended questions | Subsequent to information about three different types of consent with different scopes for data sharing, research participants in all three groups indicated that they would be more restrictive compared with their actual decision before debriefing. Qualitative findings support the more skeptical view on data sharing subsequent to being informed about different options of consent with limits to data sharing. Research participants’ trade-off regarding privacy and utility of research was significantly associated with participants’ decision about data release subsequent to debriefing. |
| 4. McGuire et al. 2011 [40] | USA | 336 participants, | Structured interview on data release decision and socio-demographic data. | Before being informed about different consent options 83.9 % of participants chose public data release. After debriefing, 53.1 % chose public data release, 33.1 % chose restricted (controlled access database) release, and 13.7 % opted out of data sharing. Hispanic background, not being married and college degree were associated with choice for restricted data release. |
| 5. Watanabe et al. 2011 [45] | Japan | 1378 patients | Structured questionnaire (in addition report of qualitative narratives by research coordinators on patients’ perception) | Information about biobank research was judged as understandable in 76.8 % subsequent to personal discussion compared to 60 % after information via brochures and 56.9 % via DVD. Interest in personal data was positively associated with better recall rate, in younger patients, higher satisfaction with consent process and with willingness to participate in future study. Research coordinators indicate need among research participants to get more information following consent procedure. |
| 6. Valle-Mansilla 2010 [44] | Spain (USA) | 279 patients (30 patients from US sample) | Structured questionnaire | 230 patients (82.4 %) remembered giving consent to biobank research. 40.3 % preferred general consent for future use of sample, 49.8 % preferred limited or specified consent. Support for broad consent was less supported in industry-sponsored research. |
| 7. Lipworth et al. 2009 [38] | Australia | 12 patients, parents of patients and other lay stakeholders | Semi-structured in depth interviews | Participants’ supported making use of material/data subsequent to participation in biobank research. There was evidence for expectation regarding direct benefit of research for research participants and little awareness of harm. |
| 8. Ormond et al. 2009 [42] | USA | 200 patients | Structured interviews including open ended question | The best understood domains included the nature of the study, benefit to future patients, and the voluntary nature of participation. Lower knowledge scores included potential risks and discomforts, experimental nature of the research, procedures in the event of study-related injury, and confidentiality issues. |
| 9. McGuire et al. 2008 [39] | USA | 15 patients and controls from a genomic study on epilepsy | Focus groups including one Follow up focus group with presentation and discussion of findings from initial focus groups. | There was a general interest in receiving information and making decisions about data sharing. Participants preferred multiple data sharing options. However, they were more likely to consent to public data release when given fewer options. Most participants felt that genomic information should not be publicly released without explicit consent from research participants. |
| 10. Hoyer et al. 2005 [ | Sweden | 930 research participants | Structured questionnaire | 64.5 % of participants were aware that they had consented to donate a blood sample, 55.4 % thought that they had consented to donate phenotypic information, and 31.6 % believed that they could withdraw their consent. 85.9 % acceped surrogate decision making by regional research ethics committees. |