Great North Neonatal Biobank

  • Research type

    Research Tissue Bank

  • IRAS ID

    161883

  • Research summary

    Great North Neonatal Biobank

  • REC name

    North East - Newcastle & North Tyneside 1 Research Ethics Committee

  • REC reference

    15/NE/0334

  • Date of REC Opinion

    22 Jan 2016

  • REC opinion

    Further Information Favourable Opinion

  • Data collection arrangements

    We are actively researching to help us make progress in the care of preterm and sick newborn babies and many of our research projects use body fluids like stool, urine, blood or breast milk to help us learn more about health and illness in babies.
    Because the babies are so small we have developed a system to salvage left over blood and other samples that is well established but currently not formalised and therefore not accessible to other researchers, and not 'protected' for future research. To help we are co-ordinating the development of the Newcastle Babies Biobank which will form a separate collection within the existing Newcastle Biomedicine Biobank. The samples that we use are collected without any additional handling or sampling from the baby: either from a nappy (stool, urine), from a routine suction/swab (saliva/secretions), or left over after necessary tests have been done (blood), or feeds are complete (breast milk from the end of syringes etc), or taken as part of a necessary operation (tissue, usually bowel). We never take ‘extra’ amounts of blood/tissue for banking, simply store any already taken and ‘left over’ after clinical testing. Formal consent is taken and data stored securely in link-anonymised fashion.
    We also have some samples from healthy babies to act as 'controls' for the sick and preterm babies. This means we can better understand findngs in the ill babies.

  • Research programme

    Newcastle Neonatal Service cares for newborn babies with complex health needs and increased risks of problems that relate to growth and bowel function, immunological and metabolic function both during their stay in the neonatal unit and affect outcomes in later life. Although survival of very preterm or sick babies has improved there remain significant areas that we still do not understand well, and some problems have actually increased as survival has improved (infection, necrotising enterocolitis (NEC), developmental delay, autistic spectrum disorders). The current focus of the Newcastle Neonatal Service is research into growth, bowel health and a specific problem called NEC, infection and stool flora, overall cell metabolism and immune function. This research programme has published in scientific journals, and includes National and International collaborations. The Babies biobank is intended to support work in Newcastle including analysing gut bacteria, function, metabolism and how this affects gut and general health, how the immune system responds, and what gut tisssue is like in health and disease. We also use DNA to look at aspects of genetic variation, including both normal or inherited variations, as well as disease specific or acquired mutation.

  • Storage license

    12534

  • RTBTitle

    Great North Neonatal Biobank

  • Establishment organisation

    Newcastle University

  • Establishment organisation address

    The Medical School

    Framlington Place

    Newcastle upon tyne

    NE2 4HH