Exploratory Data Analysis for Disease Pedigrees and Cancer Genetics
NCT ID: NCT00339508
Last Updated: 2018-04-05
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
13385 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2002-03-19
2017-05-09
Brief Summary
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A full protocol will subject all data sets to ethics committee oversight without the need for individual exemption requests, enabling the researchers to assist users with software problems and to collaborate with other researchers.
From January 1, 2000, through December 15, 2001, the researchers received 71 requests for assistance, 19 of which included data files. None of the data files had any names or patient identifiers. Of these 19, in 8 cases the researchers sent back modified output files. In two of these eight cases, the researchers could see results of research interest; one of them concerned human data. In 2 of the 19 cases, the researchers sent back modified input files; in one such case, they established a collaboration with the originator of the files. In sum, most requests come under the heading of customer service, with no research contents. A few, however, do lead to research results or collaborations, for which ethics committee oversight is required.
Over the three-year time frame of this protocol, the researchers anticipate receiving data on a maximum of 10,000 individuals. They have modified their software documentation to explicitly instruct users to make sure the data files they send have no names. Should they receive files with names, they will delete the files and ask the originator to resubmit them with names encoded. Users submit data through unencrypted e-mail. The data are stored in password-protected computers at the National Institutes of Health.
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Detailed Description
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This protocol has been in effect since early 2002. The only amendments during that time were to set up three collaborations, as described in Sections 4.6 and 4.7 and 4.8. The protocol has been quite useful and no changes are proposed in procedures.
Conditions
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Eligibility Criteria
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Exclusion Criteria
When receiving data sets for problem reports and/or new feature requests, all data sets would be accepted. We would not consider how the data were collected. The reasons for this are: the medical aspects of the data set are irrelevant to the reason we receiving the data; we cannot respond promptly to problem reports, if we have to get details on how the data were collected; the data are never used by us for any research into the traits being studies by the researchers who collected data.
Collaborations:
For collaborative studies, we would request details of how the data were collected, including evidence of approval by a local ethics board. We would submit to the NHGRI IRB an amendment describing the new collaboration. That amendment would necessarily include a formal indication that the collaborating research group has permission to collect and analyze the human data that they present to us (in coded and summarized format). For collaborators in the United States that permission would consist of an IRB-approved protocol or exemption from the collaborator's institution. For collaborators outside the United States the permission would be one of the types of agreements currently supported by the NIH Office of Human Subjects Research.
If we do not see evidence of appropriate permission to collect the data or the IRB turns down our proposed amendment, then we would exclude ourselves from participating in the proposed collaboration.
There are two other circumstances under which we have also excluded collaborating on analysis of data sets in the past and may do so in the future. One circumstance was where we did not feel that the proposed data set could possibly give sufficient statistical power to detect anything interesting. The other circumstance was where we had an existing collaboration with one research group, and a competing group asked us to collaborate also.
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
NIH
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Alejandro A Schaffer, Ph.D.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Locations
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National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), 9000 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Countries
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References
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Buhler J, Owerbach D, Schaffer AA, Kimmel M, Gabbay KH. Linkage analyses in type I diabetes mellitus using CASPAR, a software and statistical program for conditional analysis of polygenic diseases. Hum Hered. 1997 Jul-Aug;47(4):211-22. doi: 10.1159/000154415.
Desper R, Jiang F, Kallioniemi OP, Moch H, Papadimitriou CH, Schaffer AA. Inferring tree models for oncogenesis from comparative genome hybridization data. J Comput Biol. 1999 Spring;6(1):37-51. doi: 10.1089/cmb.1999.6.37.
Atkinson TP, Schaffer AA, Grimbacher B, Schroeder HW Jr, Woellner C, Zerbe CS, Puck JM. An immune defect causing dominant chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis and thyroid disease maps to chromosome 2p in a single family. Am J Hum Genet. 2001 Oct;69(4):791-803. doi: 10.1086/323611. Epub 2001 Aug 21.
Other Identifiers
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02-HG-N152
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: secondary_id
999902152
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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