Lysaght Tamra, Kerridge Ian H, Sipp Douglas, Porter Gerard, Capps Benjamin J
Centre for Biomedical Ethics, National University of Singapore, Level 2 Block MD11, Clinical Research Centre, 10 Medical Drive, 117576, Singapore, Singapore.
Centre for Values, Ethics and the Law in Medicine, University of Sydney, Medical Foundations Building K25, Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia.
J Bioeth Inq. 2017 Jun;14(2):261-273. doi: 10.1007/s11673-017-9776-y. Epub 2017 Feb 28.
Cell and tissue-based products, such as autologous adult stem cells, are being prescribed by physicians across the world for diseases and illnesses that they have neither been approved for or been demonstrated as safe and effective in formal clinical trials. These doctors often form part of informal transnational networks that exploit differences and similarities in the regulatory systems across geographical contexts. In this paper, we examine the regulatory infrastructure of five geographically diverse but socio-economically comparable countries with the aim of identifying similarities and differences in how these products are regulated and governed within clinical contexts. We find that while there are many subtle technical differences in how these regulations are implemented, they are sufficiently similar that it is difficult to explain why these practices appear more prevalent in some countries and not in others. We conclude with suggestions for how international governance frameworks might be improved to discourage the exploitation of vulnerable patient populations while enabling innovation in the clinical application of cellular therapies.
基于细胞和组织的产品,如自体成体干细胞,正被世界各地的医生用于治疗各种疾病,但这些产品既未获得批准,也未在正式临床试验中被证明是安全有效的。这些医生通常是非正式跨国网络的一部分,这些网络利用不同地理区域监管系统的差异和相似之处。在本文中,我们研究了五个地理上不同但社会经济可比的国家的监管基础设施,目的是确定在临床环境中这些产品的监管和管理方式的异同。我们发现,虽然这些法规的实施方式存在许多细微的技术差异,但它们足够相似,以至于很难解释为什么这些做法在一些国家更为普遍,而在另一些国家则不然。我们最后提出了一些建议,说明如何改进国际治理框架,以抑制对弱势患者群体的剥削,同时促进细胞疗法临床应用的创新。