Culturally responsive strategies and practical considerations for live tissue studies in Māori participant cohorts.

Frontiers in research metrics and analytics Pub Date : 2024-11-05 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/frma.2024.1468400
Helena Abolins-Thompson, Kimiora L Henare, Bridget Simonson, Mark Chaffin, Patrick T Ellinor, Claire Henry, Mairarangi Haimona, Jake Aitken, Taku Parai, Bianca Elkington, Michael Rongo, Kirsty M Danielson, Megan P Leask
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Indigenous communities globally are inequitably affected by non-communicable diseases such as cancer and coronary artery disease. Increased focus on personalized medicine approaches for the treatment of these diseases offers opportunities to improve the health of Indigenous people. Conversely, poorly implemented approaches pose increased risk of further exacerbating current inequities in health outcomes for Indigenous peoples. The advancement of modern biology techniques, such as three-dimensional (3D) in vitro models and next generation sequencing (NGS) technologies, have enhanced our understanding of disease mechanisms and individualized treatment responses. However, current representation of Indigenous peoples in these datasets is lacking. It is crucial that there is appropriate and ethical representation of Indigenous peoples in generated datasets to ensure these technologies can be used to maximize the benefit of personalized medicine for Indigenous peoples.

Methods: This project discusses the use of 3D tumor organoids and single cell/nucleus RNA sequencing to study cancer treatment responses and explore immune cell roles in coronary artery disease. Using key pillars from currently available Indigenous bioethics frameworks, strategies were developed for the use of Māori participant samples for live tissue and sequencing studies. These were based on extensive collaborations with local Māori community, scientific leaders, clinical experts, and international collaborators from the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. Issues surrounding the use of live tissue, genomic data, sending samples overseas and Indigenous data sovereignty were discussed.

Results: This paper illustrates a real-world example of how collaboration with community and the incorporation of Indigenous worldviews can be applied to molecular biology studies in a practical and culturally responsive manner, ensuring fair and equitable representation of Indigenous peoples in modern scientific data.

对毛利人群体进行活体组织研究的文化响应策略和实际考虑因素。
导言:全球土著社区受到癌症和冠状动脉疾病等非传染性疾病的影响并不公平。人们越来越重视用个性化医疗方法治疗这些疾病,这为改善土著居民的健康状况提供了机会。反之,如果方法执行不力,则会增加进一步加剧土著人目前在健康结果方面的不平等的风险。现代生物学技术的进步,如三维(3D)体外模型和新一代测序(NGS)技术,提高了我们对疾病机制和个体化治疗反应的认识。然而,目前这些数据集中缺乏原住民的代表。至关重要的是,在生成的数据集中要有适当的、符合伦理道德的原住民代表,以确保这些技术可用于最大限度地为原住民提供个性化医疗:本项目讨论了如何利用三维肿瘤器官组织和单细胞/细胞核 RNA 测序来研究癌症治疗反应和探索免疫细胞在冠状动脉疾病中的作用。利用现有土著生物伦理学框架的关键支柱,制定了使用毛利人样本进行活体组织和测序研究的策略。这些策略是在与当地毛利社区、科学领袖、临床专家以及麻省理工学院和哈佛大学布罗德研究所的国际合作者广泛合作的基础上制定的。论文讨论了围绕活体组织的使用、基因组数据、向海外发送样本以及土著数据主权等问题:本文以一个真实的例子说明了如何以一种实用且符合文化习惯的方式在分子生物学研究中与社区合作并融入土著世界观,从而确保土著人民在现代科学数据中得到公平公正的代表。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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