Saúde em Debate (Feb 2020)

From ‘Me’ to ‘Us’: solidarity and biocitizenship in the Brazilian cancer precision medicine innovation system

  • Maria Sharmila Alina de Sousa,
  • Dante Marcello Claramonte Gallian,
  • Rui Monteiro de Barros Maciel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/0103-11042019s209
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. spe2
pp. 114 – 132

Abstract

Read online

ABSTRACT As biotechnology innovations move from the bench to the bedside and, recently, also to the Internet, a myriad of emanating challenges and potentials may rise under distinct sociocultural and political economic contexts. Using a grounded-theory-inspired case study focused on the Brazilian research consortium for Medullary Endocrine Neoplasia type 2 (BrasMEN) – an inherited syndrome where genetic tests define cost-effective interventions – we outline facilitators and barriers to both development and implementation of a ‘public health genomics’ strategy under a developing country scenario. The study is based on participant observation at three centres and interviews with all who might hold an interest in MEN2 around Brazil. We discuss how a ‘solidarity’-based motivation for individual and collective ‘biocitizenship’ is driving people’s pre-emptive actions for accessing and making personalised healthcare available at Brazil’s Unified Health System (SUS) via the ‘co-production’ of science, technology and the culture for precision medicine – termed Brazil’s ‘hidden’ biomedical innovation system. Given the establishment of BrasMEN as ‘solidarity networks’ – promoting and supporting the cancer precision medicine’s rationale – our data illustrates how a series of new bioethical challenges raise from such engagement with familial cancer genomics under Brazil’s developing country scenario and how this social/soft technology constitute a solution for Euro/North American societies.

Keywords