糖心Vlog

Cancer researchers issue warning over data protection plans

Cancer research could become impossible in Europe if a proposed data protection regulation is adopted, according to a medical research body.

Published on
July 25, 2014
Last updated
May 27, 2015

The European Society for Medical Oncology said that the proposed changes 鈥 being considered by the European Union 鈥 would put a 鈥渉alt鈥 to many public health research efforts.

The changes, designed to address data privacy concerns in the digital age, would add a 鈥渘early impossible administrative burden鈥 to cancer research, which could 鈥渋rreversibly slow down鈥 the pace of cancer research, it added.

The ESMO is the latest body to raise concerns over the potential effects of the proposed data protection regulation on medical research. So far this year the Wellcome Trust, the Medical Research Council and the European University Association have publicly spelled out the problems the changes would cause for science.

The ESMO has suggested that the wording of the regulation be amended to include a 鈥渙ne-time consent鈥 for personal information used in research, instead of the 鈥渆xplicit and specific鈥 consent listed in the proposal.

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This would save scientists from having to contact each patient every time they wanted to use their data for research. It would also give them access to data and stored research samples after patients have died, which would be impossible under the proposed system.

The ESMO鈥檚 suggested changes would ensure that patients knew what they were consenting to and adds safeguards so that they could withdraw their consent at any time. A similar 鈥渙ne-time consent鈥 is included in the EU鈥檚 new clinical trials regulations adopted earlier this year, where it allows researchers to use data for further projects after a trial is over, the ESMO explained.

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The president of the ESMO, Rolf Stahel, said: 鈥淥ur proposal achieves the correct balance between the right to privacy and the right to health. It actually 鈥榚mpowers鈥 patients, allowing them to choose whether to donate their data and tissue for public health research, whose ultimate goal is to find cures.鈥

Paolo Casali, ESMO public policy committee chair and author of an ESMO position paper on the matter, said: 鈥淲e are calling upon the European Union to assure that all forms of public health research will survive and be able to function within the safeguards that are in place, without adding the nearly impossible administrative burden of re-consenting each patient, every time, for every single project, which could irreversibly slow down the accelerated pace that cancer research has gained over the past decades.鈥

holly.else@tsleducation.com

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