Research Ethics Review (Jul 2022)

Reporting incidental findings from non-biological assessments in human subject research

  • Alyssa Pingitore,
  • Ashley Mack,
  • Justin Zhang,
  • Eric G Devine,
  • Jackson Doerr,
  • Caroline Denneen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/17470161221093877
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18

Abstract

Read online

Incidental findings in research with human participants may have implications for a person’s present health or future health outcomes. Current guidelines focus on methods for handling and reporting incidental findings from biological test data but incidental findings might also arise from non-biological tests. This article presents three examples in which the results from non-biological test data can be predictive of future disease and should be disclosed to research participants. It is intended to increase awareness and facilitate further discussion about the reporting of incidental findings from non-biological data.