Biobanking Challenges & Opportunities in Africa
Researchers face significant challenges accessing African biospecimens — regulatory, ethical, logistical and infrastructural. But solutions are gradually emerging.
Summary of the challenges
Difficulties stem from regulatory, ethical, infrastructural and logistical barriers. Addressing them improves access and strengthens partnerships.
Regulatory & ethical barriers+
Infrastructure limitations+
Logistical challenges+
Trust & historical mistrust+
Data sovereignty & representation+
Positive developments
Several countries have made significant strides in infrastructure and supportive regulation, aided by global initiatives such as FIND and IARC.
South Africa
Leads in infrastructure, with robust institutions like the NHLS and the SA Medical Research Council, plus aligned regulatory frameworks.
Kenya
KEMRI is at the forefront of genomic research; ethical review boards and evolving regulations support access.
Uganda
The Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI) and H3Africa participation boost infrastructure, with a developing regulatory framework.
Nigeria
ACEGID and H3Africa involvement strengthen infrastructure, with improving regulatory frameworks.
Botswana
Known for HIV research, with strong protocols via the Botswana-Harvard AIDS Institute Partnership.
Rwanda
Heavy investment in healthcare infrastructure and centralised health-data systems support biospecimen management.
Egypt
A leader in North Africa, with advanced cancer-research infrastructure at the National Cancer Institute and Cairo University.
FIND
The Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics strengthens local capabilities and ethical standards across Africa.
IARC
Part of the WHO, IARC supports cancer research, develops biobank networks and facilitates high-quality biospecimen collection.
Countries like South Africa, Kenya, Uganda, Nigeria, Botswana, Rwanda, and Egypt stand out due to their advanced infrastructures and clearer regulations. Additionally, initiatives like FIND and IARC play essential roles in improving access to biospecimens.
Two talks on African biobanking
References+
de Vries J, et al; H3Africa Consortium. Regulation of genomic and biobanking research in Africa: a content analysis of ethics guidelines, policies and procedures from 22 African countries. BMC Med Ethics. 2017;18(1):8. PMID: 28153006.
Staunton C, Moodley K. Challenges in biobank governance in Sub-Saharan Africa. BMC Med Ethics. 2013;14:35. PMID: 24025667.
Mendy M, et al; BCNet survey participants. Infrastructure and facilities for human biobanking in low- and middle-income countries: a situation analysis. Pathobiology. 2014;81(5–6):252–260. PMID: 25792214.
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