Framework for responsible sharing of genomic and health-related data (original) (raw)

The HUGO Journal volume 8, Article number: 3 (2014)Cite this article

Preamble

The sharing of genomic and health-related data for biomedical research is of key importance in ensuring continued progress in our understanding of human health and wellbeing. The challenges raised by international, collaborative research require a principled but nevertheless practical Framework that brings together regulators, funders, patient groups, information technologists, industry, publishers, and research consortia to share principles about data exchange. Such a Framework will facilitate responsible research conduct.

This Framework is developed under the auspices of the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health. Its mission is to accelerate progress in human health by helping to establish a common Framework of harmonized approaches to enable effective and responsible sharing of genomic and clinical data and to catalyze data sharing projects that drive and demonstrate the value of data sharing.

This Framework provides guidance for the responsible sharing of human genomic and health-related data, including personal health data and other types of data that may have predictive power in relation to health. In particular, it highlights, and is guided by, Article 27 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Article 27 guarantees the rights of every individual in the world “to share in scientific advancement and its benefits_” (including to freely engage in responsible scientific inquiry), and at the same time “_to the protection of the moral and material interests resulting from any scientific_…_production of which [_a person_] _is the author_”. (As set out in Appendix 1, many other international conventions and national laws, regulations, codes and policies also guide responsible data sharing behavior).

This Framework is guided by the human rights of privacy, non-discrimination and procedural fairness. At the same time, it considers all human rights principles relevant, complementary and interrelated, founded as they are on respect for human dignity. Since science proceeds only with the broad support of society, respect for all persons is a primary driver underlying all other derived principles. In particular, this Framework establishes a set of foundational principles for responsible research conduct and oversight of research data systems in the realm of genomic and health-related data sharing. It interprets the right of all people to share in the benefits of scientific progress and its applications as being the duty of data producers and users to engage in responsible scientific inquiry and to access and share genomic and health-related data across the translation continuum, from basic research through practical applications. It recognizes the rights of data producers and users to be recognized for their contributions to research, balanced by the rights of those who donate their data. In addition to being founded on the right of all citizens in all countries to the benefits of the advancements of science, and on the right of attribution of scientists, it also reinforces the right of scientific freedom.

The value of this Framework is that it: offers political and legal dimensions that reach beyond the moral appeals of bioethics and provides a more robust governance framework for genomic and health-related data sharing; speaks to groups and institutions, not just individuals; stresses the progressive realization of duties; and urges action by governments, industry, funders, publishers, and researchers to create an international environment for responsibly sharing data.

This Framework will be elaborated by subsequent Policies (Appendix 2) on particular issues such as ethical governance, consent, privacy and security. The Framework and its subsequent Policies should be used in projects around the world (whether Global Alliance “inspired” or not) such that they become the tools that approval entities, recognized by different jurisdictions, will turn or refer to for guidance. Recognizing diversity of legal and ethical approaches and being responsive to emerging issues, both this Framework and its Policies are intended to provide leadership in this domain for wider discussion.

Purpose and interpretation

1. Purpose

The purpose of this Framework is to provide a principled and practical framework for the responsible sharing of genomic and health-related data. Its primary goals are to:

  1. i.
    Protect and promote the welfare, rights, and interests of individuals from around the world in genomic and health-related data sharing, particularly those who contribute their data for biomedical research;
  2. ii.
    Complement laws and regulations on privacy and personal data protection, as well as policies and codes of conduct for the ethical governance of research;
  3. iii.
    Foster responsible data sharing and oversight of research data systems;
  4. iv.
    Establish a framework for greater international data sharing, collaboration and good governance;
  5. v.
    Serve as a dynamic instrument that can respond to future developments in the science, technology, and practices of genomic and health-related data sharing;
  6. vi.
    Serve as a tool for the evaluation of responsible research by research ethics committees and data access committees; and
  7. vii.
    Provide overarching principles to be respected in developing legally-binding tools such as data access agreements.

2. Interpretation

Without ascribing legal meaning, this Framework should be interpreted in good faith and is to be understood as a whole. The Foundational Principles and Core Elements are to be understood as complementary and interrelated, as appropriate and relevant in different contexts, countries and cultures. This Framework will be supported by Policies for guidance in particular issues such as, but not limited to, ethical governance, privacy and security, and consent. For the purposes of this Framework, “data sharing” includes data transfer or data exchange between data users, or where data are made available to secondary researchers, either openly or under specified access conditions.

Application

This Framework is intended for all entities or individuals providing, storing, accessing, managing or otherwise using genomic and health-related data, including data donors, users, and producers. This includes, but is not limited to, researchers, research participants and patient communities, publishers, research funding agencies, data protection authorities, hospitals, research ethics committees, industry, ministries of health, and public health organizations.

Foundational principles

The Foundational Principles of this Framework guide the responsible sharing of genomic and health-related data. They also facilitate compliance with the obligations and norms set by international and national law and policies.

Core elements of responsible data sharing

It is good practice for those involved in genomic and health-related data sharing to have core elements of responsible data sharing in place. The following Core Elements of the Framework aid in the interpretation of the Foundational Principles to individuals and organizations involved in the sharing of genomic and health-related data. The Core Elements should be interpreted in a proportionate manner that acknowledges different levels of risk and community cultural practices. This Framework applies to use of data that have been consented to by donors (or their legal representatives) and/or approved for use by competent bodies or institutions in compliance with national and international laws, general ethical principles, and best practice standards that respect restrictions on downstream uses. Endorsement of the Framework does not preclude the development of particular guidance via Policies for specific populations (e.g. children) or issues (e.g. ethical governance, privacy and security, and consent).

Core elements of responsible data sharing

Transparency

Accountability

Engagement

Data quality and security

Privacy, data protection and confidentiality

Risk-benefit analysis

Recognition and attribution

Sustainability

Education and training

Accessibility and dissemination

Implementation mechanisms and amendments

    1. This Framework should be adopted by organizations and bodies involved in genomic and health-related data sharing. Organizations and bodies adhering to this Framework should take all reasonable and appropriate measures, whether of a regulatory, contractual, administrative or other character, to give effect to the Foundational Principles and Core Elements set out in this Framework in accordance with the international law of human rights and should, by means of all reasonable and appropriate measures, promote their implementation.
    1. Any persons, organizations or bodies adhering to this Framework may propose one or more amendments to the present Framework by communicating the amendments to the Regulatory and Ethics Working Group of the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (the “REWG”). The REWG shall publicly circulate such amendments for comments and possible inclusion in this Framework.
    1. The REWG, in collaboration with biomedical, patient advocacy, and ethical and policy organizations and committees, will track the adoption of this Framework and its application through subsequent Policies. It will also routinely review its provisions, be aware of advances in basic research and technology, and ethical and legal developments, and attempt to ensure that this Framework is fit for purpose.

Appendix 1

Foundational Human Rights Instruments

Constitution of the World Health Organization (WHO 1946)

Bermuda Principles on Human Genome Sequencing (1996)

Universal Declaration on the Human Genome and Human Rights (UNESCO 1997)

Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine (Council of Europe 1997)

Statement on DNA Sampling: Control and Access (HUGO 1998)

Statement on Human Genomic Databases (HUGO Ethics Committee 2002)

Declaration of Ethical Considerations regarding Health Databases (WMA 2002)

International Ethical Guidelines for Biomedical Research Involving Human Subjects (CIOMS, WHO 2002)

Budapest Open Access Initiative (2002)

Sharing Data from Large-scale Biological Research Projects: A System of Tripartite Responsibility (Fort Lauderdale Statement, 2003)

International Declaration on Human Genetic Data (UNESCO, IBC 2003)

European Society of Human Genetics: Data Storage and DNA Banking for Biomedical Research (ESHG 2003)

Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights (UNESCO 2005)

Additional Protocol to the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine, concerning Biomedical Research (Council of Europe 2005)

Recommendation Rec (2006) 4 of the Committee of Ministers to Member States on Research on Biological Materials of Human Origin (Council of Europe 2006)

OECD Principles and Guidelines for Access to Research Data from Public Funding (OECD 2007)

International Ethical Guidelines for Epidemiological Studies (CIOMS, WHO 2008)

Recommendations from the 2008 International Summit on Proteomics Data Release and Sharing Policy (Amsterdam Principles, 2008)

Guidelines for Human Biobanks and Genetic Research Databases (OECD 2008, 2009)

Toronto Statement on Prepublication Data Sharing (2009)

Joint Statement by Funders of Health Research (2011)

2012 Best Practices for Repositories: Collection, Storage, Retrieval and Distribution of Biological Material for Research (ISBER 2012)

Responsible Conduct in the Global Research Enterprise: A Policy Report (InterAcademy Council 2012)

Declaration of Helsinki (WMA 2013)

Guidelines governing the Protection of Privacy and Transborder Flows of Personal Data (OECD 2013)

Appendix 2

Figure 1.

Figure 1

figure 1

Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH): proposed policy template.

Full size image

Acknowledgements

This _Framework for Responsible Sharing of Genomic and Health_-Related Data is the result of the work of many people and committees. Developed under the auspices of the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health, the Framework was initially formulated by an international committee (Regulatory and Ethics Working Group) representing a wide spectrum of the bioethics, genomics, and clinical communities. Collaborative input was provided from individuals as well as biomedical, patient advocacy, and ethical, policy and legal organizations, committees, and projects from all regions of the world. These include, but are not limited to:

Biobank Standardisation and Harmonisation for Research Excellence project (BioSHaRE);

Centre for Law and Genetics (University of Tasmania);

Centre of Genomics and Policy (McGill University);

ELSI 2.0;

H3Africa;

Health Research Authority (UK);

HeLEX (University of Oxford);

Human Variome Project (HVP);

INSERM;

International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC);

International Rare Disease Research Consortium (IRDiRC);

International Society for Biological and Environmental Repositories (ISBER);

Personal Genome Project (USA);

PErsonalised Risk Stratification for Prevention and Early deteCTIon of breast cancer project (PERSPECTIVE);

PHG Foundation (UK);

Public Population Project in Genomics and Society-International Policy interoperability and data Access Clearinghouse (P3G-IPAC); and

other Global Alliance for Genomics and Health Working Groups and Task Teams.

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  1. Global Alliance for Genomics and Health, Toronto, Canada
    Bartha Maria Knoppers

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  1. Bartha Maria Knoppers
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Correspondence toBartha Maria Knoppers.

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Knoppers, B.M. Framework for responsible sharing of genomic and health-related data.HUGO J 8, 3 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1186/s11568-014-0003-1

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