Background |
Following the rapid progress of genomic research in humans and their ancestors, biomedical and health research has expanded from the study of rare monogenic diseases to common, multifactorial diseases. However, genetic background of most complex diseases is determined by a large number of small, often additive effects from genetic predisposition, lifestyle and the environment. Both the discovery of critical genes and pathways as well as the follow up analyses of the impact and significance of these will critically depend on biobanks, large collections of well-documented, up-to-date epidemiological, clinical and biological information and accompanying material from large numbers of patients and healthy persons representing general population. Biobanks are a key resource in unraveling also the association between genetic background, life style and environmental risk factors for various diseases and their trait components. Biobanks are characterized by a collection of biological samples, such as blood, tissues or DNA, plus associated epidemiological, clinical and research data. The biobanks may also consists of biomolecular research tools, key resources in analyses aiming at unravelling genetic and environmental factors underlying diseases and influencing their outcome. Research tool resources are also required for identification of new targets for therapy and may help to reduce attrition in drug discovery and development. Thus, biobanks, if well collected, characterized and accessible provide a critical competitive advantage for the advancement of biotechnology, and human health and disease related activities in Europe. Biomedical quality-assessed samples and data as well as biomolecular resources and molecular analysis tools are essential for academic and industry-driven research to treat and prevent human diseases. Goals of BBMRIThe preparatory phase aims to provide the basis for the actual operational biobanking infrastructure and plans to provide a strategy and structure for:
BBMRI will increase the scientific excellence and efficacy of European research in the biomedical sciences as well as expand and secure competitiveness of European research and industry in a global context and attract investments in pharmaceutical and biomedical research facilities, also from outside of Europe. BBMRI will be composed of a network of centres organized in a distributed hub structure comprising:
The Structure of BBMRIKey components of BBMRI are comprehensive collections of biological samples from different (sub-) populations of Europe, which should be linked with continuously updated data on the health status, lifestyle and environmental exposure of the sample donors. This can only be achieved in a federated network of centres established in most, if not all, European Member States. Therefore, the format of BBMRI should be a distributed hub structure in which the hubs coordinate activities, including collection, management, distribution and analysis of samples and data for the major domains. The biobanks, biomolecular resources and technology centres, which are members of BBMRI, are associated with their specific domain hub. Furthermore, a variety of public or private partners (e.g., universities, hospitals, companies), which provide biological samples, data, technologies or services, may be associated with certain BBMRI members.
This structure provides great flexibility so that new members and partners can be connected at any time and so that it can be adapted to emerging needs in biomedical research. The IT infrastructure which employs federated database architecture and grid computing technology will integrate the complex network of hubs, members and partners. Hubs will be coordinated and directed by an executive management, which is supported by a governance council as well as by a high-calibre advisory board and receives input from the stakeholder forum to guarantee clear responsibilities as well as open and transparent decision-finding processes. BBMRI will link to several ongoing international activities, such as those pursued by P3G, the Innovative Medicines Initiative, ISBER, the OECD, and the WHO, as well as research projects funded under FP5/FP6 and new projects under FP7. To avoid duplication of activities, BBMRI will exchange concepts and experience with these activities. BBMRI will contribute to the scientific excellence of Europe by
BBMRI will provide a competitive advantage and fruitful environment for development of service and technology companies by acting as an R&D partner as well as a customer. The implementation and development of its "distributed hub structure" is designed to allow the extension of the infrastructure by incorporating existing and new components that meet the criteria of excellence of BBMRI and that have physical locations in the convergence regions as well as the outermost regions thus providing a pan-European solution. BBMRI will speed up development of personalised medicine and disease prevention and will embrace some of the needs of basic research as well as of the biotech and pharmaceutical industries. Thus it will enable improvements in public health and will help some bottlenecks in the drug discovery and development process. BBMRI will strongly boost political and scientific momentum to harmonise ethical, legal and quality standards across Europe.
BBMRI will contribute to EC policy developments by
BBMRI Fact SheetParticipating Members Scientific Partners: 30 8. Budgetary information Preparatory cost: 5 M€ Timetable until operation Preparatory phase: 27 months |