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Harmonising the human biobanking consent process: an Irish experience

Biobanks are repositories of human biological samples and data. They are an important component of clinical research in many disease areas and often represent the first step toward innovative treatments. For biobanks to operate, researchers need human participants to give their samples and associate...

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Autores principales: O'Sullivan, Lydia, Carroll, Tomás P., Clarke, Niamh, Cooper, Sarah, Cullen, Ann, Gorman, Laura, McCann, Billy, Mee, Blánaid, Miller, Nicola, Murphy, Verena, Murray, Máiréad, O'Leary, Jackie, O'Toole, Sharon, Snapes, Emma, Bracken, Suzanne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000 Research Limited 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8886168/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35280850
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/hrbopenres.13384.3
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author O'Sullivan, Lydia
Carroll, Tomás P.
Clarke, Niamh
Cooper, Sarah
Cullen, Ann
Gorman, Laura
McCann, Billy
Mee, Blánaid
Miller, Nicola
Murphy, Verena
Murray, Máiréad
O'Leary, Jackie
O'Toole, Sharon
Snapes, Emma
Bracken, Suzanne
author_facet O'Sullivan, Lydia
Carroll, Tomás P.
Clarke, Niamh
Cooper, Sarah
Cullen, Ann
Gorman, Laura
McCann, Billy
Mee, Blánaid
Miller, Nicola
Murphy, Verena
Murray, Máiréad
O'Leary, Jackie
O'Toole, Sharon
Snapes, Emma
Bracken, Suzanne
author_sort O'Sullivan, Lydia
collection PubMed
description Biobanks are repositories of human biological samples and data. They are an important component of clinical research in many disease areas and often represent the first step toward innovative treatments. For biobanks to operate, researchers need human participants to give their samples and associated health data. In Ireland, research participants must provide their freely given informed consent for their samples and data to be taken and used for research purposes. Biobank staff are responsible for communicating the relevant information to participants prior to obtaining their consent, and this communication process is supported by the Participant Information Leaflets and Informed Consent Form (PI/ICFs). PILs/ICFs should be concise, intelligible, and contain relevant information. While not a substitute for layperson and research staff discussions, PILs and ICFs ensure that a layperson has enough information to make an informed choice to participate or not. However, PILs/ICFs are often lengthy, contain technical language and can be complicated and onerous for a layperson to read. The introduction of the General Data Protection Regulation and the related Irish Health Research Regulation presented additional challenges to the Irish biobank community. In May 2019, the National Biobanking Working Group (NBWG) was established in Ireland. It consists of members from diverse research backgrounds located in universities, hospitals and research centres across Ireland and a public/patient partner. The NBWG aimed to develop a suite of resources for health research biobanks via robust and meaningful patient engagement, which are accessible, General Data Protection Regulation/Health Research Regulation-compliant and could be used nationally, including a PIL/ICF template. This open letter describes the process whereby this national biobank PIL/ICF template was produced. The development of this template included review by the Patient Voice in Cancer Research, led by Professor Amanda McCann at University College Dublin and the Health Research Data Protection Network.
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spelling pubmed-88861682022-03-10 Harmonising the human biobanking consent process: an Irish experience O'Sullivan, Lydia Carroll, Tomás P. Clarke, Niamh Cooper, Sarah Cullen, Ann Gorman, Laura McCann, Billy Mee, Blánaid Miller, Nicola Murphy, Verena Murray, Máiréad O'Leary, Jackie O'Toole, Sharon Snapes, Emma Bracken, Suzanne HRB Open Res Open Letter Biobanks are repositories of human biological samples and data. They are an important component of clinical research in many disease areas and often represent the first step toward innovative treatments. For biobanks to operate, researchers need human participants to give their samples and associated health data. In Ireland, research participants must provide their freely given informed consent for their samples and data to be taken and used for research purposes. Biobank staff are responsible for communicating the relevant information to participants prior to obtaining their consent, and this communication process is supported by the Participant Information Leaflets and Informed Consent Form (PI/ICFs). PILs/ICFs should be concise, intelligible, and contain relevant information. While not a substitute for layperson and research staff discussions, PILs and ICFs ensure that a layperson has enough information to make an informed choice to participate or not. However, PILs/ICFs are often lengthy, contain technical language and can be complicated and onerous for a layperson to read. The introduction of the General Data Protection Regulation and the related Irish Health Research Regulation presented additional challenges to the Irish biobank community. In May 2019, the National Biobanking Working Group (NBWG) was established in Ireland. It consists of members from diverse research backgrounds located in universities, hospitals and research centres across Ireland and a public/patient partner. The NBWG aimed to develop a suite of resources for health research biobanks via robust and meaningful patient engagement, which are accessible, General Data Protection Regulation/Health Research Regulation-compliant and could be used nationally, including a PIL/ICF template. This open letter describes the process whereby this national biobank PIL/ICF template was produced. The development of this template included review by the Patient Voice in Cancer Research, led by Professor Amanda McCann at University College Dublin and the Health Research Data Protection Network. F1000 Research Limited 2022-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC8886168/ /pubmed/35280850 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/hrbopenres.13384.3 Text en Copyright: © 2022 O'Sullivan L et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Open Letter
O'Sullivan, Lydia
Carroll, Tomás P.
Clarke, Niamh
Cooper, Sarah
Cullen, Ann
Gorman, Laura
McCann, Billy
Mee, Blánaid
Miller, Nicola
Murphy, Verena
Murray, Máiréad
O'Leary, Jackie
O'Toole, Sharon
Snapes, Emma
Bracken, Suzanne
Harmonising the human biobanking consent process: an Irish experience
title Harmonising the human biobanking consent process: an Irish experience
title_full Harmonising the human biobanking consent process: an Irish experience
title_fullStr Harmonising the human biobanking consent process: an Irish experience
title_full_unstemmed Harmonising the human biobanking consent process: an Irish experience
title_short Harmonising the human biobanking consent process: an Irish experience
title_sort harmonising the human biobanking consent process: an irish experience
topic Open Letter
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8886168/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35280850
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/hrbopenres.13384.3
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