Sixty years after Henrietta Lacks died of cervical cancer, the Baltimore County, Md., woman's cells live on in laboratories around the globe. Collected by Johns Hopkins researchers as she was being treated, the cells grew incessantly and have since helped scientists make blockbuster medical advances, including cancer treatments and the polio vaccine.
Decades passed before anyone told Lacks's relatives of her enduring gift to modern science. And while the advances that have come from her cells are worth millions, her family never received a cent.
In the 1950s, tissues were taken routinely from patients and used for research without their approval. But today, Lacks's story, illuminated in the new book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot, raises important and unresolved issues about the bioethics of modern tissue research, experts say: consent and money.
Much has changed since Lacks's cells were harvested. There are now federal informed-consent regulations, and a repeat of a Lacks scenario is unlikely, say experts in bioethics. Nevertheless, debate is brewing in research circles over the gray areas: Are consent rules strong enough? Are people entitled to any compensation if pieces of their bodies turn out to be worthy of a medical advancement?
"If we're looking at the story of Henrietta Lacks and her family, we can say with confidence that what they experienced would not happen again," said Ruth Faden, director of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics. "What remains unresolved are the still very big questions about what level of consent . . . and whether and under what circumstances is compensation appropriate. These are all big open questions. There has been big movement forward in the bioethical questions raised from that case, but that's a long way from saying we've got this figured out."
Today, it would be unethical for a scientist to take samples from people exclusively for research and not ask their permission, Faden said.
But tissues can sometimes be used for research without a patient's knowledge. When people go to the hospital or a doctor's office for a medical procedure, tissues and blood removed from a patient's body are often stored for research down the road. Hundreds of millions of samples are collected in the United States alone, said Dr. David Wendler, a staff scientist at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center and a bioethics expert.
While some institutions give patients consent forms specifying their tissues might be used for research, many don't, Skloot said. Federal regulations regarding patient consent apply only to federally funded research. There aren't clear laws requiring informed consent for tissues that are stored, nor is it clear if scientists must tell people if their tissues might be used for profit, she said. The result has been lawsuits and a small but growing group of activists who insist patients should have more control over their bodies.
"There is a lot of argument over this," Skloot said.
And it might only grow louder.
"People have been doing this and banking these things for so long, but it's becoming bigger because we're able to learn more and more from cells and DNA," she said. "As the technology is advancing, the researching on the genetic level is increasing."
Tissue research is big business for biotech companies and is the future of efforts to make medical advances to personalize medicine, such as drugs tailored to someone's genetic background, said Arthur Caplan, chairman of the department of medical ethics at the University of Pennsylvania.
"We're talking about a huge international issue - this collection of tissue goes on everywhere," he said. "People don't understand that the collection of tissue . . . is an explosive part of biomedical research."
While some people think consent laws need strengthening, the majority of the public doesn't know anything about tissue storage, Caplan said. And most who do don't care, he said. (next page »)
...what's in it for me?
Sorry, the only reason this is a problem is because everybody nowadays wants to be compensated for everything. What's wrong with people?
If my surgeon and the researchers at Dartmouth-Hitchcock make a bazillion dollars from some medical breakthough to fight triple positive breast cancer using my ambutated breast tissue, well good for them! If my life and the lives of hundreds of thousands of other women are saved because they used my tissue for research leading to a cure, that IS compensation!
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Bioethics and human tissue! Welcome to the party people!
I really had to look twice and rub my eyes, the Monitor actually running a story that has some medical substance to it.
"If we're looking at the story of Henrietta Lacks and her family, we can say with confidence that what they experienced would not happen again," said Ruth Faden, director of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics."
Oh really? Well let the aborted tissue debate finally begin! Maybe now we can get past the women's right to choose issue (it is after all 2010) and start having a meaningful debate about what really happens to the aborted tissue?
After all, the right to choose issue is nothing more than a subterfuge! The real issue that medicine doesn't want society to lock on to is the tissue issue exposed by Skloot.
I was fortunate to have studied under David T. Ozar at Loyola of Chicago while assisting in cancer research while in college. I highly recommend reading Rebeca Skloot's book and anything you can find from Ozar.
...."the guarantee to every one of a free exercise of his industry, & the fruits acquired by it." - Thomas Jefferson
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