Nacul Luis, O'Donovan Dominic G, Lacerda Eliana M, Gveric Djordje, Goldring Kirstin, Hall Alison, Bowman Erinna, Pheby Derek
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, ITD/CRD/International Centre for Evidence in Disability, K/490, Keppel Street, WC1E 7HT London, UK.
BMC Res Notes. 2014 Jun 18;7:370. doi: 10.1186/1756-0500-7-370.
Our aim, having previously investigated through a qualitative study involving extensive discussions with experts and patients the issues involved in establishing and maintaining a disease specific brain and tissue bank for myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), was to develop a protocol for a UK ME/CFS repository of high quality human tissue from well characterised subjects with ME/CFS and controls suitable for a broad range of research applications. This would involve a specific donor program coupled with rapid tissue collection and processing, supplemented by comprehensive prospectively collected clinical, laboratory and self-assessment data from cases and controls.
We reviewed the operations of existing tissue banks from published literature and from their internal protocols and standard operating procedures (SOPs). On this basis, we developed the protocol presented here, which was designed to meet high technical and ethical standards and legal requirements and was based on recommendations of the MRC UK Brain Banks Network. The facility would be most efficient and cost-effective if incorporated into an existing tissue bank. Tissue collection would be rapid and follow robust protocols to ensure preservation sufficient for a wide range of research uses. A central tissue bank would have resources both for wide-scale donor recruitment and rapid response to donor death for prompt harvesting and processing of tissue.
An ME/CFS brain and tissue bank could be established using this protocol. Success would depend on careful consideration of logistic, technical, legal and ethical issues, continuous consultation with patients and the donor population, and a sustainable model of funding ideally involving research councils, health services, and patient charities. This initiative could revolutionise the understanding of this still poorly-understood disease and enhance development of diagnostic biomarkers and treatments.
我们之前通过一项定性研究进行了调查,该研究涉及与专家和患者进行广泛讨论,探讨了建立和维护针对肌痛性脑脊髓炎/慢性疲劳综合征(ME/CFS)的特定疾病脑库和组织库所涉及的问题。我们的目标是制定一项方案,用于建立一个英国ME/CFS高质量人体组织库,该库将收纳特征明确的ME/CFS患者及对照者的组织,适用于广泛的研究应用。这将涉及一个特定的捐赠者计划,以及快速的组织采集和处理,并辅以从病例和对照者那里前瞻性收集的全面临床、实验室和自我评估数据。
我们查阅了已发表文献中现有组织库的运作情况以及它们的内部方案和标准操作程序(SOP)。在此基础上,我们制定了此处呈现的方案,该方案旨在满足高技术和伦理标准以及法律要求,并基于英国医学研究理事会脑库网络的建议。如果将该设施纳入现有的组织库,将最为高效且具有成本效益。组织采集将迅速进行,并遵循严格的方案,以确保保存的组织足以满足广泛的研究用途。一个中央组织库将具备资源,既能够大规模招募捐赠者,又能够在捐赠者死亡时迅速做出反应,以便及时采集和处理组织。
可以使用本方案建立一个ME/CFS脑库和组织库。成功将取决于对后勤、技术、法律和伦理问题的仔细考虑,持续与患者和捐赠者群体进行磋商,以及一个可持续的资金模式,理想情况下涉及研究理事会、卫生服务机构和患者慈善机构。这一举措可能会彻底改变对这种仍未被充分理解的疾病的认识,并促进诊断生物标志物和治疗方法的开发。