Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-02T17:38:36.965Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

“Consent Does Not Scale”: Laying Out the Tensions in Balancing Patient Autonomy with Public Benefit in Commercializing Biospecimens

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 September 2023

Kayte Spector-Bagdady*
Affiliation:
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, ANN ARBOR, MI, USA
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Independent Articles: Commentary
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics

Selling Clinical Biospecimens: Guidance for Researchers and Private Industry” by Peter Schwartz and Jane Hartsock explores the important and complex world of academic medical centers (AMCs) commercializing patient biospecimens.Reference Schwartz and Hartsock1 It is important because specimen commercialization can enable critical research. It is complex because it makes most patients uncomfortable. As the authors point out, there are few legal requirements to structure options. Striking the right balance is left up to individual policies and procedures on a hospital by hospital (or even doctor by doctor) basis.

Collaborations between AMCs and commercial industry can fund and accelerate important health research with biospecimens and related phenotypic information.Reference Golbus, Pescatore, Nallamothu, Shah and Kheterpal2 AMCs are in a unique position to collect biospecimens as patients share diverse specimen types and related phenotypic information as part of their clinical care. In fact, hospitals are being “inundated with requests” from industry across the country.3

Industry is also a key component of financially supporting AMC biobanks.Reference Caulfield, Burningham and Joly4 In recent years, types of data remuneration arrangements have expanded to licensing agreements for industry-derived machine-learning models, discounted clinical data analyses, electronic medical record “awards” and invoice credits, or academic advantages such as access to data necessary for high-impact research.5 For example, in Dinerstein v Google,6 employees from Google and UChicago published the AI model, trained on UChicago patients, together.Reference Rajkomar, Oren and Chen7

But as Schwartz and Hartsock explore, many patients when asked are uncomfortable with specimen commercialization.Reference Kim, Kim and Bell8 Looking at health information, patients also report they are particularly uncomfortable with data sharing for profit and are concerned that profit-driven users might burden or exploit patients.Reference Trinidad, Platt and Kardia9

So, how can we respect patient autonomy interests while maintaining the public benefit of enabling industry/AMC research collaboration? As asked by the authors: do AMCs owe their patients something more than required by law? And if so — what is it?

Solution 1: Ask Patients for their Permission

As highlighted by Schwartz and Hartsock, the first potential solution to the above problem is for AMCs to ask patients for their permission to commercialize their biospecimens. This, theoretically, would ensure that all commercialized biospecimens came from fully consenting individuals, ensuring respect for their autonomy. But there are two problems with this solution.

First, it limits the impact of research with biospecimens. As argued by Neil Richards and Woodrow Hartzog, “consent does not scale.”Reference Richards and Hartzog10 To request and store (and potentially withdraw) individual consent for each specimen contribution is prohibitively expensive and unfeasible for the number of specimens necessary for research.Reference Lynch, Wolf and Barnes11 It can also limit the demographic variation of the specimen contributor cohort. Differences in consent rate can be associated with self-identified race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status.Reference Spector-Bagdady, Tang and Jabbour12 A lack of demographic variation can be important for genetic research, insofar as self-identified race and ethnicity is associated with genetic ancestry, and is sometimes used as a proxy-indicator for other social determinants of health (although this use is being critically reevaluated).Reference Vyas, Eisenstein and Jones13

Second, as authors and others have demonstrated elsewhere, asking patients for their informed consent to commercialization does not generally increase their knowledge or understanding.Reference Kasperbauer, Schmidt and Thomas14 While these two problems appear to be in conflict (how can asking for informed consent for commercialization impact consent but not knowledge?), the conflict is likely due to study design. Having a fulsome conversation with a researcher about specimen commercialization increases knowledge and decreases hypothetical consent, but just being given a consent to sign which includes a commercialization disclosure — as a patient would during normal clinical care — does not increase knowledge or impact consent.

But what are the actual implications of such transparency? If patients realize that their specimens were commercialized, will the fact that it was disclosed previously stabilize trust? Will it negatively impact patient clinical behavior? Will it further marginalize or limit the options of historically excluded patient populations? These are critical questions that need to be answered as we move forward.

Solution 2: Maintain the Status Quo

The simpler solution is the preferred one for most AMCs in the country: adhere to the law and move on. This position is not without ethical merit, the law was developed with extensive and thoughtful debate. The federal government spent six years publicly discussing the ethical issues at stake in requiring consent for all biospecimen research. While they acknowledged requiring consent for de-identified biospecimen research appeared “consistent with the majority of the public’s wishes,” they ultimately argued that such a requirement would “allow autonomy to trump beneficence and justice” as, among other things, “it would result in fewer specimens collected from fewer sources, with adverse implications for rare diseases and for justice…”15 Faden et al. also classically argued in 2013 that patients can even be seen as having a moral obligation to participate in low-risk data research to improve health care as part of a learning health system from which they too benefit.Reference Faden, Kass and Goodman16

Critically, however, both the federal government and Faden et al. were talking about research generally — not the commercialization of biospecimens specifically. And patients are more concerned about notice regarding commercial versus academic research. For example, in a recent survey, we found that the majority of patients (n=2054) reported that it was “very true” they were interested in notification regarding commercial use of their biospecimens (both identified and deidentified) and were more likely to want notice regarding commercial use versus university use.Reference Spector-Bagdady, Trinidad and Kardia17

What’s Behind Door #3?

I agree that patient autonomy interests in consent to low-risk biospecimen research are generally outweighed by the public interest in supporting clinical research. But, given that 1) patients are even more likely to want notice regarding commercial versus university use of biospecimens and 2) not all commercial biospecimen research actually contributes to the public good, I think it is hard for AMCs to justify a lack of notice. Schwartz and Hartsock also point out the critical function of patient trust,Reference Platt and Kardia18 which can be decreased when patients are surprised about biospecimen commercialization.

But does disclosure add ethical value if patients are not going to understand (or even read) what is written on the form? Are AMCs being more respectful of patients if they give them notice, even without an opportunity to opt out? I agree with authors that the answer is yes.Reference Spector-Bagdady19 At Michigan Medicine we are currently refining a model for how to do so.Reference Spector-Bagdady, Hutchinson and Kaleba20 The majority of patients want notice, and disclosure without an opt-out is unlikely to impact the number of research specimens. That is an obvious compromise to make between individual autonomy and public good.

But what are the actual implications of such transparency? If patients realize that their specimens were commercialized, will the fact that it was disclosed previously stabilize trust? Will it negatively impact patient clinical behavior? Will it further marginalize or limit the options of historically excluded patient populations? These are critical questions that need to be answered as we move forward.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the National Human Genome Research Institute (K01HG01049) and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (R01TR004244).

References

Schwartz, P.H. and Hartsock, J.A., “Selling Clinical Biospecimens: Guidance for Researchers and Private Industry,” Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 50, no. 2 (2023): 429436.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Golbus, J.R., Pescatore, N.A., Nallamothu, B.K., Shah, N., and Kheterpal, S., “Wearable Device Signals and Home Blood Pressure Data Across Age, Sex, Race, Ethnicity, and Clinical Phenotypes in the Michigan Predictive Activity & Clinical Trajectories in Health (MIPACT) Study: A Prospective, Community-Based Observational Study,” Lancet Digital Health 3 (2021): e707e715.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
C. Farr, “Hospital Execs Say they are Getting Flooded with Requests for Your Health Data (December 18, 2019), CNBC, available at <https://www.cnbc.com/2019/12/18/hospital-execs-say-theyre-flooded-with-requests-for-your-health-data.html> (last visited June 15, 2023).+(last+visited+June+15,+2023).>Google Scholar
Caulfield, T., Burningham, S., Joly, Y. et al., “A Review of the Key Issues Associated with the Commercialization of Biobanks,” Journal of Law and the Biosciences 1 (2014): 94110.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
C. Ross, “Epic’s AI Algorithms, Shielded From Scrutiny by A Corporate Firewall, are Delivering Inaccurate Information on Seriously Ill Patients,” StatNews, July 16, 2021, available at <https://www.statnews.com/2021/07/26/epic-hospital-algorithms-sepsis-investigation/> (last visited June 15, 2023); H. Kipp, “Michigan Medicine Awarded $440,000 for Health IT Contributions,” May 7, 2018, (last visited June 15, 2023), available at <https://michigan.it.umich.edu/news/2018/05/07/michigan-medicine-awarded-440000-from-epic/> (last visited June 15, 2023).+(last+visited+June+15,+2023);+H.+Kipp,+“Michigan+Medicine+Awarded+$440,000+for+Health+IT+Contributions,”+May+7,+2018,+(last+visited+June+15,+2023),+available+at++(last+visited+June+15,+2023).>Google Scholar
See Dinerstein v. Google, LLC, No. 19 C 4311, 2020WL 5296920, 1079 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 4, 2020).Google Scholar
Rajkomar, A., Oren, E., and Chen, K. et al., “Scalable and Accurate Deep Learning with Electronic Health Records,” Nature Partner Journals: Clinical Medicine 1 (2018): 18.Google ScholarPubMed
Kim, J., Kim, H., and Bell, E. et al., “Patient Perspectives About Decisions to Share Medical Data and Biospecimens for Research,” JAMA Netwwork Open 2 (2019): e199550; K. Spector-Bagdady, R.G. De Vries, M.G. Gornick et al., ‘Encouraging Participation and Transparency in Biobank Research,” Health Affairs (Millwood) 37 (2018): 1313-1320.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Trinidad, M.G., Platt, J., and Kardia, S.L.R., “The Public’s Comfort with Sharing Health Data with Third-Party Commercial Companies,” Humanities and Social Sciences Communications 7 (2020): 149; R.D. Jones, C. Krenz, and K.A. Griffith et al., “Governance of a Learning Health Care System for Oncology: Patient Recommendations,” Journal of Clinical Oncology: Oncology Practice 17 (2021): e479-e89; D. Grande, D.A. Asch, and F. Wan et al., “Are Patients with Cancer Less Willing to Share Their Health Information? Privacy, Sensitivity, and Social Purpose,” Journal of Oncology Practice 11 (2015): 378-83.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Richards, N. and Hartzog, W., “The Pathologies of Digital Consent,” Washington University Law Review 96 (2019): 14621504, at 1467.Google Scholar
L.H. Glimcher, “How not to End Cancer in Our Lifetimes,” The Wall Street Journal, April 4, 2016, available at <https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-not-to-end-cancer-in-our-lifetimes-1459811684> (last visited June 15, 2023); Lynch, H.F., Wolf, L.E., and Barnes, M., “Implementing Regulatory Broad Consent Under the Revised Common Rule: Clarifying Key Points and the Need for Evidence,” Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 47 (2019): 213231.CrossRef+(last+visited+June+15,+2023);+Lynch,+H.F.,+Wolf,+L.E.,+and+Barnes,+M.,+“Implementing+Regulatory+Broad+Consent+Under+the+Revised+Common+Rule:+Clarifying+Key+Points+and+the+Need+for+Evidence,”+Journal+of+Law,+Medicine+&+Ethics+47+(2019):+213–231.>Google Scholar
Spector-Bagdady, K., Tang, S., Jabbour, S. et al., “Respecting Autonomy and Enabling Diversity: The Effect Of Eligibility And Enrollment On Research Data Demographics,” Health Affairs (Millwood) 40 (2021): 18921899.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vyas, D.A., Eisenstein, L.G., and Jones, D.S., “Hidden in Plain Sight — Reconsidering the Use of Race Correction in Clinical Algorithms,” New England Journal of Medicine 383 (2020): 874882.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kasperbauer, T.J., Schmidt, K.K., and Thomas, A. et al., “Incorporating Biobank Consent into a Healthcare Setting: Challenges for Patient Understanding,” American Journal of Bioethics: Empirical 12 (2021): 113122; L.K. Sedig, E.H. De Loney, and S.B. Bailey et al., “Perspectives from a Predominantly African American Community about Biobank Research and a Biobank Consent Form,” Ethics and Human Research 44 (2022): 26-33; K. Spector-Bagdady, C.D. Krenz, and C. Brummel et al., “‘My Research Is Their Business, but I’m Not Their Business’: Patient and Clinician Perspectives on Commercialization of Precision Oncology Data,” The Oncologist 25 (2020): 620-626.Google ScholarPubMed
Department of Homeland Security et al., “Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects,” Federal Register 82, no. 12 (2017): 7149- 7274, at 7165-68.Google Scholar
Faden, R.R., Kass, N.E., and Goodman, S.N. et al., “An Ethics Framework for a Learning Health Care System: A Departure from Traditional Research Ethics and Clinical Ethics,” Hastings Center Report S23 (2013): S1627.Google Scholar
Spector-Bagdady, K., Trinidad, G., and Kardia, S. et al., “Reported Interest in Notification Regarding Use of Health Information and Biospecimens,” JAMA 328 (2022): 474476.Google ScholarPubMed
Platt, J. and Kardia, S., “Public Trust in Health Information Sharing: Implications for Biobanking and Electronic Health Record Systems,” Journal of Personalized Medicine 5 (2015): 321.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Spector-Bagdady, K., “Hospitals Should Act Now to Notify Patients About Research Use of their Data and Biospecimens,” Nature Medicine 26 (2020): 306308.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Spector-Bagdady, K., Hutchinson, R., and Kaleba, E.O. et al., “Sharing Health Data and Biospecimens with Industry - A Principle-Driven, Practical Approach,” New England Journal of Medicine 382 (2020): 20722075.Google ScholarPubMed