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Samenvattende nota's / summary bio-ethics in experimental medicine

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Summary notes from the course 'Bioethics in experimental medicine' taught by, among others, Professor De Groote. Based on Powerpoints and lessons. ALL chapters were integrated into the summary, but are sometimes under different titles (more structure brought to the whole).

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December 17, 2025
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48
Written in
2025/2026
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BIO-ETHICS IN HUMAN RESEARCH
Introduction ........................................................................................................................................2
General ethics .....................................................................................................................................4
Medical ethics .....................................................................................................................................6
Ethics in medical research ................................................................................................................. 10
Dual use research of concern (DURC) ................................................................................................. 25
Protection of essential rights of patients ............................................................................................. 27
Protection of essential rights of minors ............................................................................................... 31
Medical ethics committee and other instances.................................................................................... 34
Research and the GDPR ..................................................................................................................... 42
Big data and AI in healthcare .............................................................................................................. 47




1

,INTRODUCTION

 Learning outcomes
 Scientist
 Communicator: societal implications and ethical limitations of biomedical research
 Professional: (inter)national regulations
 Researcher: code of conduct
! adhere to code of scientific integrity during all phases of research
o COVID-19 pandemic
- Research on COVID-19
= moral obligation to learn as much as possible – as quickly as possible
= diagnosis – transmission – treatment – prevention
 Interventional studies
 Treatment
 Blood testing
 Feasibility of online training/coaching
 Vaccine studies
 Epidemiological studies
 Effect of COVID-19 infection in chronic disease
 Registration of affected persons – survival – herd immunity
! Needs ethical approval
 Balance expediting research with
maintaining protection of participants
e.g. sharing data of patients and research subjects
exposing immunized individuals to live virus
participation of children
 Pressure might encourage subversion of regulations
and speed up review process at expense of quality
= protocol deviations and adaptation of ICF
- Non-COVID-19 clinical research
 Problems to access the hospital/trial site
 Study on hold by the sponsor
 Telecommunication + home physician + home drug-delivery
- Stages to consider when defining care for patients in a pandemic
! can raise moral distress for healthcare providers
 Conventional care: all patients admitted – quality of care as usual
 Contingency care: alternative capacity – quality of care as usual
 Crisis care: capacity exceeded – quality of care not guaranteed
! most appropriate prognostic scoring system
 Quality of care  disability discrimination
 Survival to hospital discharge  prediction based
 Long-term survival  disability discrimination
 Clinical scoring system
- Lessons learned
 Fast and safe authorisation for protocols on COVID-19 therapeutics
 Coordinated review between member states by CTR
 Shortened timelines for validation – assessment – notification




2

, Definition
 Ethics
o Branch of philosophy
o Systematizing – defending – recommending concepts of right and wrong
 Bio-ethics
o Advances in biology – medicine – technology
o Issues: philosophical – social – legal
 Bio-ethics in humans
o Principles of medical ethics
- Autonomy
- Beneficence
- Non-maleficence
- Justice




3

, GENERAL ETHICS




Less visible – makes sure the reasoning doesn’t ‘collapse’


 Scientific statement: pv = constant ≈ measurement
 moral statements: abortion is morally wrong ≈ taste
≠ ethics (should be in between) ≈ judgement
 Any rational procedure by which we determine what individual human beings ‘ought’ to do or
what is ‘right’ for them to do – or to try to bring about by voluntary action
 Rational procedure: aim for consistency – extrapolation – counterexamples – refining – …
= universalisation
o Ethical reasoning involves claims that transcend individual case
o Applicable in similar situations
! Method or test to evaluate more specific rules or norms
 Ought and right
o Careful not to go immediately from description to prescription
E.g. it is not because a treatment extents life  that it is ‘the best’ (more side effect)
Smoking significantly increases risk of lung cancer  you shouldn’t smoke
o Ethical arguments are meant to bridge the gap between the two
 Normative: prescribe + include principles – values – norms

TYPES OF ETHICAL REASONING

 Different ways of looking at problems
 Ethical intuition comes naturally
 Intuition comes with a cost
 Accidental – unargued


CONSEQUENTIALISM
 Tackles ethical questions by looking at the consequences of one’s actions
 Utilitarianisms = most well-known subtype
 Actions should maximize good effects and avoid negative effects
 Greatest good for the greatest number
E.g. organ donation – reuse of research data –
kill 1 person (trolley problem) i.l.o. allowing 5 to be killed
 No distinction between doing and allowing
 Advantages
 Consequences are easier to judge than intentions
 Impartial: everyone is treated as one – and no more than one
 Easy: since there is only one general rule = maximize good outcomes and minimize bad ones

4

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