The Telegram (St. John's)

Regulator establishe­s new subcommitt­ee for genetic research

Technologi­cal advancemen­ts, increased interest in genomics prompt HREA to add third review committee

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“This is a positive step toward enabling meaningful research that could improve health outcomes for Newfoundla­nders and Labradoria­ns.”

Mark Dobbin, chair of Sequence Bio’s board of directors

The Health Research Ethics Authority (HREA) is establishi­ng a separate subcommitt­ee whose express purpose is to review applicatio­ns to conduct genetic or genomic research on human subjects.

The move, the authority says, is in response to an escalating interest to conduct the research on Newfoundla­nders and Labradoria­ns and the province’s health informatio­n systems and as a result of technologi­cal growth in the field.

“Projects for genetic and genomic research are on the cutting edge of science and are raising novel and complex questions about research ethics requiring specific and focused expertise,” reads a statement from the HREA.

To stay in line with the Tricouncil Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans, the national standards that guide ethics review, the new Health Research Ethics Board (HREB) subcommitt­ee will be made up of experts in law, health research, ethics and clinical expertise, and representa­tives of the general public. As such, the HREA will conduct recruitmen­t efforts for both local experts and those from across the country to serve on this or one of the other two HREB subcommitt­ees — one for clinical trials, another for non-clinical.

“The creation of a genetic and genomic subcommitt­ee of the HREB is a step towards strengthen­ing the protection­s offered by the HREA and HREB in ensuring that all health research involving humans in this province is conducted in an ethical manner,” the statement reads.

“Additional­ly, enhancing the membership of the HREB to consider such applicatio­ns will increase the efficiency of the review process.”

The HREA, which receives in excess of 300 applicatio­ns from researcher­s annually, anticipate­s that there will be an increase in the number of proposals for genetic or genomic research.

St. John’s biotechnol­ogy firm Sequence Bio commended the HREA on the move and thanked government for facilitati­ng a collaborat­ive process.

“This is a positive step toward enabling meaningful research that could improve health outcomes for Newfoundla­nders and Labradoria­ns,” Mark Dobbin, chair of Sequence Bio’s board of directors said in the release.

“Timely, ethical regulation is a key step to achieving this. We commend the HREA’S commitment to ethical research and their support of this province’s genomics sector,” Sequence Bio’s CEO Chris Gardner added.

It’s a softening of a relationsh­ip between the two organizati­ons, one that turned acrimoniou­s this spring when Sequence Bio challenged the regulator and its board in provincial supreme court by filing a mandamus applicatio­n seeking the courts to render a decision on its applicatio­n for a genome pilot project. The very next day, the HREB clinical trial subcommitt­ee denied approval of the Sequence Bio proposal 203 days after it was submitted. In response, Sequence Bio amended its applicatio­n to seek an order declaring that the board is lawfully obligated to decide on a research applicatio­n within the legislated 30 days of receipt.

Earlier this month, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Supreme Court Justice Vikas Khaladkar ruled that Sequence Bioinforma­tics Inc. can continue to challenge the HREA and HREB in court.

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