| Literature DB >> 31649726 |
Nchangwi Syntia Munung1,2, Victoria Nembaware2,3, Jantina de Vries1, Daima Bukini4, Furahini Tluway4, Marsha Treadwell5,6, Raphael Zozimus Sangeda4,7, Gaston Mazandu2,3, Mario Jonas2,3, Vivian Paintsil8, Obiageli E Nnodu9, Emmanuel Balandya4, Julie Makani4, Ambroise Wonkam2,3.
Abstract
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is one of the most prevalent genetic conditions in sub-Saharan Africa. It is a chronic, lifelong disease often characterized by severe pain. However, SCD has received little investment terms of health research, though there is currently a growing pool of SCD data from health and research facilities in different countries. To facilitate research on SCD in Africa, the SickleInAfrica consortium has established a SickleInAfrica registry. The registry will store a systematic collection of longitudinal data from persons with SCD across sub-Saharan Africa, and currently, participants are being enrolled in Ghana, Nigeria, and Tanzania. In establishing this registry, the SickleInAfrica consortium decided to actively identify and anticipate possible ethical issues that may arise in the development and management of the registry. This was motivated, in part, by the near absence of well documented ethical issues for registry research in Africa, more-so for registries enrolling participants across multiple countries and for a genetic condition. The consortium aims to establish standards for the equitable use of data stored in the registry. This paper presents a comprehensive report on the ethical considerations that came up in setting up a genetic disease registry across multiple African countries and how they were addressed by the SickleInAfrica consortium. Major issues included: active involvement of patients in the initiation and management of the registry; questions of assent and re-consent; the importance of ensuring that fears of exploitation are not replicated in African-African research collaborations; and the importance of public engagement in the management of registries. Drawing on this experience, SickleInAfrica plans to set up an ethics helpdesk for genetic disease registries and research in Africa.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; ELSI (ethical; SickleInAfrica; and social issues); legal; registries; sickle cell disease
Year: 2019 PMID: 31649726 PMCID: PMC6795756 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2019.00943
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Review of national ethics guidelines and consent forms for participating SickleInAfrica sites.
| Guideline/consent | Ghana | Nigeria | Tanzania | Comments and suggestions from ELSI core after review of consent forms and national regulation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Guideline | Guideline under development | National Code of Health Research Ethics (2007) | Guidelines of Ethics for Health Research in Tanzania (2009) | Guidelines for Nigeria and Tanzania support data sharing. The absence of a national guideline or regulation for Ghana will mean that approval by a REC is sufficient |
| Data sharing mentioned in consent forms | No | No | No | Include a statement that data will be shared with researchers other parts of the world |
| Storage period | No | No | No | Provide information on minimum period of storage or lifespan of the registry. For example, “your data will be stored for a minimum period of 10 years. If we are unable to maintain the registry, the match list may be destroyed” |
| Retrospective use of information | No | No | No | Add a statement that once enrolled to the registry, information related to SCD in their medical files will be extracted and included in the registry |
| Withdrawal | Yes | Yes | Yes | Additional statement required on what happens when a participant chooses to withdraw. For example: “If you decide to stop being part of the registry, your information that was already included in the registry will continue to be used for research purposes but no new information about you will be added to the registry” |
| Privacy and confidentiality | Not Specified | Not Specified | Not Specified | Additional statement that project staff will have access to anonymized and original data. Researchers will only have access to de-identified data |
| Who can consent | Parents (in the case of a minor). | Parent (assent and parental consent form available). | Parent (in the case of a minor) | Additional statement that when participant reach adulthood they will be given the opportunity to consent |
Recommendations for data governance in the SickleInAfrica registry.
| Components of data sharing agreement for Tanzania | Tanzania Guideline | Recommendation by the SickleInAfrica consortium |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum Storage period | Not specified | A minimum period (10 years) needs to be included in the data sharing agreement. |
| Restriction to data sharing | Shared data can only be used for academic and research purposes. Transfer of data to third parties is not allowed, except for academic or research purposes, in which case, the recipient will have to secure the written consent of the provider. | Allow for maximum sharing of data for research that is linked to SCD including public health use other commercial activities that may support innovation, or the development of new interventions for SCD |
| Ownership of data | Provider institution will retain ownership of the data | Sites would decide on ownership rights and control of the data collected at the level of each country. SickleInAfrica will be custodian of aggregated data held in the central hub |
| Capacity building | The recipient of the data shall, in cooperation with the data provider, facilitate capacity building in data management and analysis in the provider’s institution. | Capacity building will be evidenced based. Sites will identify and prioritize their research capacity needs. SADaCC will support, facilitate and monitor capacity building activities at the different sites |
| Research publications | Recipient of data is expected to acknowledge the source of the data in all publications reporting use of the data. | SADaCC will develop, in consultation with SPARCo, an authorship policy taking cognisance of national regulation. |
| Intellectual property | The data provider shall be the sole owner of all rights and the title to the data transferred, including existing intellectual property rights. | Intellectual property rights may be retained by the SickleInAfrica while taking into consideration institutional policies |
| Benefit sharing | The Provider and Recipient shall discuss the sharing of benefits arising from use of the data in accordance with the contributions of the Parties | SickleInAfrica will maintain meaningful relationships with SCD patient groups, as key partners in the consortium. Benefit sharing arrangements would be discussed with all stakeholders on a case by case bases |