Back to Search Start Over

Banking together

Authors :
Silvia Giovanelli
Maurizio Moggio
Paolo Rebulla
Mario Nosotti
Alberto Zanella
Maria Teresa Bardella
Guido Coggi
Lucilla Lecchi
Pier Alberto Bertazzi
Elena Salvaterra
Faustina Lalatta
Silvano Bosari
Domenico A. Coviello
Barbara Butti
Source :
EMBO reports. 9:307-313
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
EMBO, 2008.

Abstract

D uring the past 10 years, human biological material—body fluids, cells, tissues, intracellular substances or DNA—and the related data have become an important resource for academic medical research, and for the industrial development of diagnostics and therapeutics (Godard et al, 2003). The increasing creation and use of biobanks that store both the material and the related data bears witness to their scientific value, but there is still no consensus— either internationally, or at the European or national levels—about the regulations that should govern biobanks in ethical or legal terms (Cambon-Thomsen et al, 2007; Kaye, 2005). In particular, consent models designed to appropriately regulate biobankbased research are characterized by a maze of laws, policies and ethical recommendations that range from strict (specific informed consent) to basically unrestricted use (broad consent; Boggio et al, 2007).

Details

ISSN :
14693178 and 1469221X
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EMBO reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6ca61b4aaad587ddf51fa5c695213687
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/embor.2008.41