“…It is vital, therefore, that policy development in this area is democratic, evidence-based and explicitly acknowledges the important ethical principles at stake, including autonomy, reciprocity and solidarity. Reassuringly, important research and policy reform are already being done in this areawith Australian oncology biobanks 20,25 recently outlining several models and practical strategies for managing disclosure of IRR and IF which aim to preserve and respect the autonomy of biobank donors while at the same time acknowledging the necessity for scientific judgements to be made about the utility and importance of research findings in different clinical and research settings. 1,26 More generally, however, this research provides clear evidence that knowledge gained in the course of research is valuable, in different ways to different stakeholders, and that advances in genomic research will be most likely to be successfully, and to be publicly supported, when the structures that support it are scientifically robust, clinically relevant and ethically sound.…”