Letter to the editor in response to the article “To assess the attitudes of Irish patients attending a pigmented lesion clinic and healthcare staff employed in an academic hospital to biobanking, a quantitative study”

Claudine Howard-James, Claire Quigley, Caoimhe Dalton, Anne-Marie Tobin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

We read with great interest the recent article by Bowe et al. on the attitudes of Irish patients to biobanking. It is heartening to learn that the majority of patients, healthcare workers and members of the public in Ireland are willing to donate biospecimens for medical research purposes.1 Biobanks are vital to the progression of medical research, and can be defined as structured collections of biological samples and associated data stored for the purposes of present and future research.2 One of the most recognised is the UK Biobank, a database containing genetic, lifestyle and health information from half a million UK participants. Recent UK Biobank data shows malignant melanoma is the fourth most common prevalent malignant cancer and the second most common incident malignant cancer in the 40–49 years age group.3

This willingness of patients to participate in biobanking is not always reflected in the literature. In a literature search conducted on PubMed using the terms ‘biobank’ or ‘biobanking,’ ‘attitudes’ and ‘public’; 337 abstracts were identified. These were reviewed for suitability by the authors and 62 deemed appropriate for inclusion as they contained content specific to public attitudes towards biobanking. Overall, the literature reveals a lack of knowledge of biobanking amongst the general public but a generally positive public opinion on the subject.4 A further literature search was conducted with a melanoma-specific focus on PubMed using the terms ‘biobank’ or ‘biobanking,’ ‘melanoma’ and ‘public.’ This search identified 55 abstracts, which were reviewed for suitability by the authors. There were no papers identified with content specific to public attitudes towards biobanking in melanoma, while there were 32 papers which analysed UK Biobank data for cancer research including in melanoma. We also looked at social media. Targeted searches were performed on TikTok, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter/X using the terms or hashtags ‘biobank’ and ‘biobanking’. The top 10 results on each site were analysed to identify content creator demographics, number of views and/or followers of the page, the type of content and associated hashtags or themes, as outlined in Table 1. On TikTok, the most common demographic of content creator was healthcare professionals, while on the other platforms the most common demographic was research organisations. The reach on TikTok was found to be greater than other platforms, with a mean of 20,100 views per post (range 300–96,000) and an average follower count of 4816. This compares to a mean follower count of 3497 on Instagram, 4340 on Facebook and 4688 on Twitter/X. The type of content across all platforms was predominantly educational, followed by advertising. The most common themes across all platforms were genomics and cancer research. Across all platforms, none of the top posts mentioned biobanking in the context of melanoma. A social media analysis tool, Prowly, was also utilised. This found that in the past month; ‘biobank’ was mentioned most commonly on Twitter/X which accounted for 44.44% of social media mentions. It reported that 66.67% of biobank post sentiment was positive, 29.63% neutral and 3.7% negative, as seen in Figure 1. The post with top engagement was an educational Facebook video from a medical research institute in Australia, which engaged 42 individuals.5 These searches were carried out in August 2024.

The positive attitudes reported by Bowe et al. should be amplified in the literature and on social media.

Claudine Howard-James is the corresponding author for this study, responsible for literature review, data collection and analysis, drafting and finalising the manuscript and creating the figures included in the manuscript. Claire Quigley assisted with conception and creation of the study. Caoimhe Dalton assisted with the manuscript. Anne-Marie Tobin is the consultant responsible for oversight and final approval of the manuscript.

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Not applicable.

Abstract Image

致编辑的回复文章“评估在色素病变诊所就诊的爱尔兰患者和在学术医院工作的医护人员对生物银行的态度,一项定量研究”的信
我们非常感兴趣地阅读了Bowe等人最近关于爱尔兰患者对生物银行的态度的文章。令人鼓舞的是,爱尔兰大多数病人、保健工作者和公众都愿意为医学研究捐献生物标本生物银行对医学研究的进展至关重要,可以定义为为当前和未来研究目的而存储的生物样本和相关数据的结构化集合其中最知名的是英国生物银行(UK Biobank),这是一个包含50万英国参与者的基因、生活方式和健康信息的数据库。最近英国生物银行的数据显示,恶性黑色素瘤是40-49岁年龄组中第四大最常见的恶性癌症,也是第二大最常见的恶性癌症。患者参与生物银行的意愿并不总是反映在文献中。在PubMed上使用术语“生物银行”或“生物银行”、“态度”和“公众”进行文献检索;共鉴定出337篇摘要。作者对它们的适用性进行了审查,其中62份被认为是合适的,因为它们包含了公众对生物银行的具体态度。总的来说,文献揭示了公众对生物银行缺乏了解,但公众对这一主题的看法总体上是积极的进一步的文献检索是针对黑素瘤,在PubMed上使用术语“biobank”或“biobank”、“melanoma”和“public”进行的。这项研究确定了55篇摘要,作者对它们的适用性进行了审查。虽然有32篇论文分析了包括黑色素瘤在内的癌症研究的英国生物银行数据,但没有一篇论文确定了公众对黑色素瘤生物银行的具体态度。我们还研究了社交媒体。在TikTok、Facebook、Instagram和Twitter/X上使用“biobank”和“biobank”这两个词或标签进行了有针对性的搜索。我们分析了每个网站上排名前10位的结果,以确定内容创建者的人口统计数据、页面的浏览量和/或关注者数量、内容类型和相关的标签或主题,如表1所示。在TikTok上,最常见的内容创作者是医疗保健专业人士,而在其他平台上,最常见的内容创作者是研究机构。抖音的覆盖范围比其他平台更大,平均每篇文章有2.01万次观看(300 - 9.6万次),平均粉丝数为4816人。相比之下,Instagram的平均粉丝数为3497人,Facebook为4340人,Twitter/X为4688人。所有平台的内容类型主要是教育类,其次是广告类。所有平台上最常见的主题是基因组学和癌症研究。在所有的平台上,没有一个最热门的帖子提到生物银行与黑色素瘤的关系。他们还使用了社交媒体分析工具Prowly。这发现,在过去的一个月里;“biobank”在Twitter/X上被提及最多,占社交媒体提及次数的44.44%。据报道,66.67%的biobank帖子情绪为正面,29.63%为中性,3.7%为负面,如图1所示。参与度最高的帖子是澳大利亚一家医学研究机构在Facebook上发布的一段教育视频,吸引了42人这些搜索于2024年8月进行。Bowe等人报告的积极态度应该在文献和社交媒体上得到放大。Claudine Howard-James是本研究的通讯作者,负责文献综述,数据收集和分析,起草和完成手稿,并创建手稿中包含的数字。克莱尔·奎格利(Claire Quigley)协助构思和创作了这项研究。Caoimhe Dalton协助撰写稿件。安妮-玛丽·托宾是负责监督和最终批准手稿的顾问。作者声明无利益冲突。不适用。
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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