Saturday, September 15, 2012

Ethical and legal considerations regarding the ownership and commercial use of human biological materials and their derivatives

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22977316


 2012;3:87-96. Epub 2012 Aug 7.

Ethical and legal considerations regarding the ownership and commercial use of human biological materials and their derivatives.

Source

Italian National Institute of Health, Rome, Italy.

Abstract

This article considers some of the ethical and legal issues relating to the ownership and use - including for commercial purposes - of biological material and products derived from humans. The discussion is divided into three parts: after first examining the general notion of ownership, it moves to the particular case of possible commercial use, and finally reflects on the case in point in the light of the preceding considerations. Units of cord blood donated altruistically for transplantation and which are found unsuitable for storage and transplantation, or which become unsuitable while stored in biobanks, are taken as an example. These cord-blood units can be discarded together with other biological waste, or they can be used for research or the development of blood-derived products such as platelet gel. Several ethical questions (eg, informed consent, property, distribution of profits, and others) arise from these circumstances. In this regard, some criteria and limits to use are proposed.

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