The Race Is On: Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research Goes Global

被引:0
|
作者
Mindy C. DeRouen
Jennifer B. McCormick
Jason Owen-Smith
Christopher Thomas Scott
机构
[1] Stanford University Center for Biomedical Ethics,Program on Stem Cells in Society
[2] Mayo Clinic,General Internal Medicine & Health Care PolicyResearch
[3] University of Michigan,Sociology and Organizational Studies
[4] University of British Columbia,The National Core for Neuroethics
来源
Stem Cell Reviews and Reports | 2012年 / 8卷
关键词
Policy; Ethics; Law; Human embryonic stem cell research; Induced pluripotent stem cells; NIH; Obama; G.W. Bush;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
More nations are joining the human embryonic stem cell (hESC) “race” by aggressively publishing in the peer-reviewed journals. Here we present data on the international use and distribution of hESC using a dataset taken from the primary research literature. We extracted these papers from a comprehensive dataset of articles using hESC and human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC). We find that the rate of publication by US-based authors is slowing in comparison to international labs, and then declines over the final year of the period 2008–2010. Non-US authors published more frequently and at a significantly higher rate, significantly increasing the number of their papers. In addition, international labs use a more diverse set of hESC lines and Obama-era additions are used more in non-US locations. Even considering the flood of new lines in the US and abroad, we see that researchers continue to rely on a few lines derived before the turn of the century. These data suggest “embargo” effects from restrictive policies on the US stem cell field. Over time, non-US labs have freely used lines on the US registries, while federally funded US scientists have been limited to using those lines approved by the NIH.
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页码:1043 / 1047
页数:4
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