Tissue is any kind of human material including blood, urine, skin, bone marrow, hair and teeth. Tissue can also be the whole or a part of an organ which has been removed during surgery.
Using tissue samples is a very useful way to study disease in humans. Having human tissue to experiment on also reduces the need to use animals for medical research.
There are several ways this may happen.
Protecting tissue samples and donations has become more important in recent years for two main reasons.
Firstly there have been situations in the past where patients or their families have been upset to discover that organs have been kept and possibly used for research without them knowing or giving their consent.
Secondly scientific advances mean that it is now possible to find out a large amount about a person from even the smallest sample of their tissue. This means it is now important that only authorised researchers have access to this information and that they must abide by certain rules.
If researchers want to collect tissue for the sole purpose of carrying out research they need to ask for your consent.
You should also be aware that if you are having routine treatment carried out at the hospital it is normal practice to store any tissue which is left over. One reason for this is to allow doctors to go back to the samples if you have to come into hospital again. However, these samples also provide useful material for researchers to study and you should be told if there is a chance that your tissue may be used in this way. If you don't want this to happen you have a right to ask for your tissue to be destroyed.
Genetic research looks at the effect genes have on our health. Genes are made of DNA. The DNA contains coded messages that pass on characteristics from generation to generation.
Characteristics such as eye colour and skin colour are passed from parents to their children and in the same way the chances of developing certain diseases can also be passed on.
Researchers study genes to understand more about why certain peoples develop diseases and other don't and why medicine can work for one person and not for another.
There are two main types of genetic research.
This is when researchers take a large number of tissue samples and extract the DNA so that they can learn more about how genes vary within the whole population. Usually in these studies the tissue samples will not be linked to you in any way and so it is not possible to give you any personal results.
In this kind of research you may be asked to take part because you or a member of your family has a particular medical condition. Researchers will be looking for specific genes which may play a part in this disease. In this kind of research DNA from your tissue sample will be linked to other medical details about you, but researchers must be careful to keep this information confidential.
Genetic research into specific disease has to be looked at and approved by an ethics committee, and you should be fully informed about the study and what is involved before you agree to take part. You also have the right to withdraw at any time, as you do for any other research study.
If you are asked to give a sample for research into a specific disease, these are some issues you may want to think about first:
Researchers may offer to tell you your personal results. Before agreeing to this you may want to discuss some of the following issues:
Even if your genes show that you have a higher risk of a certain disease it does not follow that you will get the disease. You may decide that it is less worrying not to know the results. Gene research is still in an early stage and so it is also possible that the information you are given is not completely accurate. In this case you could end up worrying about your health for no reason.
You may be asked when you apply for a mortgage or insurance whether you have been involved in any gene studies. Researchers are responsible for making sure that taking part in the study will not lead to discrimination against you. They might for example need to provide a properly phrased covering letter, for insurance purposes.
The following websites have more detailed information about the issues involved in donating tissue for research.
Genetic Interest Group - www.gig.org.uk
Medical Research Council - www.mrc.ac.uk