| Literature DB >> 28281147 |
Henri-Corto Stoeklé1,2, Marie-France Mamzer-Bruneel1,2,3, Charles-Henry Frouart1, Christophe Le Tourneau4,5, Pierre Laurent-Puig2,6, Guillaume Vogt7,8, Christian Hervé1,2.
Abstract
The practice and development of modern medicine requires large amounts of data, particularly in the domain of cancer. The future of personalized medicine lies neither with "genomic medicine" nor with "precision medicine", but with "data medicine" (DM) (big data, data mining). The establishment of this DM has required far-reaching changes, to establish four essential elements connecting patients and doctors: biobanks, databases, bioinformatic platforms and genomic platforms. The "transformation" of scientific research areas, such as genetics, bioinformatics and biostatistics, into clinical specialties has generated a new vision of care. Molecular tumor boards (MTB) are one response to these changes and are now providing better access to next-generation sequencing (NGS) and new cancer treatments to patients with inoperable or metastatic cancers, and those for whom the usual treatment has failed. However, MTB face a crucial ethical challenge: maintaining and improving the trust of patients, clinicians, researchers and industry in academic medical centers supported by private or public funding rather than providing genetic data directly to private companies. We believe that, in this era of DM, appropriate modern digital communication networks will be required to maintain this trust and to improve the organization and effectiveness of the system. There is, therefore, a need to reconsider the form and content of informed consent (IC) documents at all academic medical centers and to introduce dynamic and electronic informed consent (e-IC).Entities:
Keywords: Biobank; Bioinformatic; Data medicine (DM); Database; Dynamic consent; Electronic informed consent (e-IC); Ethical issues; Genomic; Molecular tumor board (MTB); Personalized medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28281147 PMCID: PMC5799317 DOI: 10.1007/s11948-017-9880-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Eng Ethics ISSN: 1353-3452 Impact factor: 3.525
Fig. 1Model of the data medicine process. Biological sample flows and biobanks are shown in green. Data flows and databases are shown in light blue. Information flows are shown in dark blue
Fig. 2a The tumor board model, versus b the molecular tumor board model
Fig. 3Model of the molecular tumor board process. Biological sample flows and biobanks are shown in green. Data flows and databases are shown in light blue. Information flows are shown in dark blue
Fig. 4Model of the two-sided market process. New biological sample, data and information flows are shown in red