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samples shall be preserved in the Repository and what will be the
                                 costs  to  individual  researchers  in  obtaining  samples  from  the
                                 Repository.  The  sample  collector  must  also  clearly  inform  every
                                 donor that he reserves the right to order destruction of his sample
                                 from the Repository at any time.

                                 To prevent any exploitation and protect the rights of participants,
                                 the three main requirements at collection level are:

                                 1.      Individual informed consent,
                                 2.      Approval of the ‘Institutional Review Board’ and

                                 3.      the  ‘Repository  Ethics  Committee’  (which  may  be
                                         formed by the BMRC)


                                 Human biological  samples:    These  include  whole  or  part  of  an
                                 organs, tissues, cells (somatic and gonadal), body fluids or samples
                                 like  serum,  buffy  coat,  DNA,  hair,  nails,  excreta,  sweat,  buccal
                                 scrapings etc.

                                 Unidentified  Specimens:  Identifiable  personal  information  was
                                 not  collected  or,  if  collected,  was  not  maintained  and  cannot  be
                                 retrieved by the repository.

                                 Identified  Specimens:  These  specimens  are  linked  to  personal
                                 information in such a way that the person from whom the material
                                 was obtained could be identified by name, patient number, or clear
                                 pedigree location ( i.e., his or her relationship to a family member
                                 whose identity is known).

                          13.10.2   The use of research samples

                                 General Principles

                                 An  Ethics  Committee  exclusive  to  the  Repository  formed  by  the
                                 BMRC  should  play  an  important  role  in  looking  at  the  issues
                                 related  to  informed  consent,  privacy  and  confidentiality,  risk-
                                 benefit  analysis,  benefit  sharing,  maintain  linkages  with  other
                                 biobank and  repositories  while  adhering  to  the basic  principles  of
                                 bioethics viz. Autonomy, Justice, Beneficence and Non-maleficence.

                                 The samples supplied to the investigators are:

                                 Unidentified  Samples:  Sometimes  termed  “anonymous,”  these
                                 samples  are  supplied  by  repositories  to  investigators  from  a
                                 collection of unidentified human biological specimens.

                                 Unlinked  Samples:  Sometimes  termed  “anonymized,”  these
                                 samples lack identifiers or codes that can link a particular sample
                                 to an identified specimen or a particular human being.




                   BMRC ETHICAL GUIDELINE ON HUMAN SUBJECTS                                   Page 75
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