Has the biobank bubble burst? Withstanding the challenges for sustainable biobanking in the digital era

Drc Chalmers(University of Tasmania), Dianne Nicol(University of Tasmania), Jane Kaye(University of Oxford), Jessica Bell(University of Oxford), Alastair V. Campbell(National University of Singapore), Calvin Wai-Loon Ho(National University of Singapore), Kazuto Kato(The University of Osaka), Jusaku Minari(The University of Osaka), Chih-hsing Ho(National University of Singapore), Colin Mitchell(University of Oxford), Fruzsina Molnár‐Gábor(Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities), Margaret Otlowski(University of Tasmania), Daniel Thiel(University of Michigan), Stephanie M. Fullerton(University of Washington), Tess Whitton(University of Tasmania)
BMC Medical Ethics
July 12, 2016
Cited by 119Open Access
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Abstract

Biobanks have been heralded as essential tools for translating biomedical research into practice, driving precision medicine to improve pathways for global healthcare treatment and services. Many nations have established specific governance systems to facilitate research and to address the complex ethical, legal and social challenges that they present, but this has not lead to uniformity across the world. Despite significant progress in responding to the ethical, legal and social implications of biobanking, operational, sustainability and funding challenges continue to emerge. No coherent strategy has yet been identified for addressing them. This has brought into question the overall viability and usefulness of biobanks in light of the significant resources required to keep them running. This review sets out the challenges that the biobanking community has had to overcome since their inception in the early 2000s. The first section provides a brief outline of the diversity in biobank and regulatory architecture in seven countries: Australia, Germany, Japan, Singapore, Taiwan, the UK, and the USA. The article then discusses four waves of responses to biobanking challenges. This article had its genesis in a discussion on biobanks during the Centre for Health, Law and Emerging Technologies (HeLEX) conference in Oxford UK, co-sponsored by the Centre for Law and Genetics (University of Tasmania). This article aims to provide a review of the issues associated with biobank practices and governance, with a view to informing the future course of both large-scale and smaller scale biobanks.


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