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Evolutionary concepts in biobanking - the BC BioLibrary

BACKGROUND: Medical research to improve health care faces a major problem in the relatively limited availability of adequately annotated and collected biospecimens. This limitation is creating a growing gap between the pace of scientific advances and successful exploitation of this knowledge. Bioban...

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Autores principales: Watson, Peter H, Wilson-McManus, Janet E, Barnes, Rebecca O, Giesz, Sara C, Png, Adrian, Hegele, Richard G, Brinkman, Jacquelyn N, Mackenzie, Ian R, Huntsman, David G, Junker, Anne, Gilks, Blake, Skarsgard, Erik, Burgess, Michael, Aparicio, Samuel, McManus, Bruce M
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2785772/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19909513
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-7-95
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author Watson, Peter H
Wilson-McManus, Janet E
Barnes, Rebecca O
Giesz, Sara C
Png, Adrian
Hegele, Richard G
Brinkman, Jacquelyn N
Mackenzie, Ian R
Huntsman, David G
Junker, Anne
Gilks, Blake
Skarsgard, Erik
Burgess, Michael
Aparicio, Samuel
McManus, Bruce M
author_facet Watson, Peter H
Wilson-McManus, Janet E
Barnes, Rebecca O
Giesz, Sara C
Png, Adrian
Hegele, Richard G
Brinkman, Jacquelyn N
Mackenzie, Ian R
Huntsman, David G
Junker, Anne
Gilks, Blake
Skarsgard, Erik
Burgess, Michael
Aparicio, Samuel
McManus, Bruce M
author_sort Watson, Peter H
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Medical research to improve health care faces a major problem in the relatively limited availability of adequately annotated and collected biospecimens. This limitation is creating a growing gap between the pace of scientific advances and successful exploitation of this knowledge. Biobanks are an important conduit for transfer of biospecimens (tissues, blood, body fluids) and related health data to research. They have evolved outside of the historical source of tissue biospecimens, clinical pathology archives. Research biobanks have developed advanced standards, protocols, databases, and mechanisms to interface with researchers seeking biospecimens. However, biobanks are often limited in their capacity and ability to ensure quality in the face of increasing demand. Our strategy to enhance both capacity and quality in research biobanking is to create a new framework that repatriates the activity of biospecimen accrual for biobanks to clinical pathology. METHODS: The British Columbia (BC) BioLibrary is a framework to maximize the accrual of high-quality, annotated biospecimens into biobanks. The BC BioLibrary design primarily encompasses: 1) specialized biospecimen collection units embedded within clinical pathology and linked to a biospecimen distribution system that serves biobanks; 2) a systematic process to connect potential donors with biobanks, and to connect biobanks with consented biospecimens; and 3) interdisciplinary governance and oversight informed by public opinion. RESULTS: The BC BioLibrary has been embraced by biobanking leaders and translational researchers throughout BC, across multiple health authorities, institutions, and disciplines. An initial pilot network of three Biospecimen Collection Units has been successfully established. In addition, two public deliberation events have been held to obtain input from the public on the BioLibrary and on issues including consent, collection of biospecimens and governance. CONCLUSION: The BC BioLibrary framework addresses common issues for clinical pathology, biobanking, and translational research across multiple institutions and clinical and research domains. We anticipate that our framework will lead to enhanced biospecimen accrual capacity and quality, reduced competition between biobanks, and a transparent process for donors that enhances public trust in biobanking.
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spelling pubmed-27857722009-12-01 Evolutionary concepts in biobanking - the BC BioLibrary Watson, Peter H Wilson-McManus, Janet E Barnes, Rebecca O Giesz, Sara C Png, Adrian Hegele, Richard G Brinkman, Jacquelyn N Mackenzie, Ian R Huntsman, David G Junker, Anne Gilks, Blake Skarsgard, Erik Burgess, Michael Aparicio, Samuel McManus, Bruce M J Transl Med Methodology BACKGROUND: Medical research to improve health care faces a major problem in the relatively limited availability of adequately annotated and collected biospecimens. This limitation is creating a growing gap between the pace of scientific advances and successful exploitation of this knowledge. Biobanks are an important conduit for transfer of biospecimens (tissues, blood, body fluids) and related health data to research. They have evolved outside of the historical source of tissue biospecimens, clinical pathology archives. Research biobanks have developed advanced standards, protocols, databases, and mechanisms to interface with researchers seeking biospecimens. However, biobanks are often limited in their capacity and ability to ensure quality in the face of increasing demand. Our strategy to enhance both capacity and quality in research biobanking is to create a new framework that repatriates the activity of biospecimen accrual for biobanks to clinical pathology. METHODS: The British Columbia (BC) BioLibrary is a framework to maximize the accrual of high-quality, annotated biospecimens into biobanks. The BC BioLibrary design primarily encompasses: 1) specialized biospecimen collection units embedded within clinical pathology and linked to a biospecimen distribution system that serves biobanks; 2) a systematic process to connect potential donors with biobanks, and to connect biobanks with consented biospecimens; and 3) interdisciplinary governance and oversight informed by public opinion. RESULTS: The BC BioLibrary has been embraced by biobanking leaders and translational researchers throughout BC, across multiple health authorities, institutions, and disciplines. An initial pilot network of three Biospecimen Collection Units has been successfully established. In addition, two public deliberation events have been held to obtain input from the public on the BioLibrary and on issues including consent, collection of biospecimens and governance. CONCLUSION: The BC BioLibrary framework addresses common issues for clinical pathology, biobanking, and translational research across multiple institutions and clinical and research domains. We anticipate that our framework will lead to enhanced biospecimen accrual capacity and quality, reduced competition between biobanks, and a transparent process for donors that enhances public trust in biobanking. BioMed Central 2009-11-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2785772/ /pubmed/19909513 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-7-95 Text en Copyright ©2009 Watson et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology
Watson, Peter H
Wilson-McManus, Janet E
Barnes, Rebecca O
Giesz, Sara C
Png, Adrian
Hegele, Richard G
Brinkman, Jacquelyn N
Mackenzie, Ian R
Huntsman, David G
Junker, Anne
Gilks, Blake
Skarsgard, Erik
Burgess, Michael
Aparicio, Samuel
McManus, Bruce M
Evolutionary concepts in biobanking - the BC BioLibrary
title Evolutionary concepts in biobanking - the BC BioLibrary
title_full Evolutionary concepts in biobanking - the BC BioLibrary
title_fullStr Evolutionary concepts in biobanking - the BC BioLibrary
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary concepts in biobanking - the BC BioLibrary
title_short Evolutionary concepts in biobanking - the BC BioLibrary
title_sort evolutionary concepts in biobanking - the bc biolibrary
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2785772/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19909513
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-7-95
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