BMC Med Inform Decis Mak
November 2024
Background: Clinical data warehouses provide harmonized access to healthcare data for medical researchers. Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside (i2b2) is a well-established open-source solution with the major benefit that data representations can be tailored to support specific use cases. These data representations can be defined and improved via an iterative approach together with domain experts and the medical researchers using the platform.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe SARS-CoV-2 pandemic highlighted the importance of fast, collaborative research in biomedicine. Within the ORCHESTRA consortium, we rapidly deployed a pseudonymization service with minimal training and maintenance efforts under time-critical conditions to support a complex, multi-site research project. Over two years, the service was deployed in 13 sites across 11 countries to register more than 10,000 study participants and 15,000 biosamples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrphanet J Rare Dis
July 2024
Background: Globally, researchers are working on projects aiming to enhance the availability of data for rare disease research. While data sharing remains critical, developing suitable methods is challenging due to the specific sensitivity and uniqueness of rare disease data. This creates a dilemma, as there is a lack of both methods and necessary data to create appropriate approaches initially.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The open-source software offered by the Observational Health Data Science and Informatics (OHDSI) collective, including the OMOP-CDM, serves as a major backbone for many real-world evidence networks and distributed health data analytics platforms. While container technology has significantly simplified deployments from a technical perspective, regulatory compliance can remain a major hurdle for the setup and operation of such platforms. In this paper, we present OHDSI-Compliance, a comprehensive set of document templates designed to streamline the data protection and information security-related documentation and coordination efforts required to establish OHDSI installations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The ORCHESTRA project, funded by the European Commission, aims to create a pan-European cohort built on existing and new large-scale population cohorts to help rapidly advance the knowledge related to the prevention of the SARS-CoV-2 infection and the management of COVID-19 and its long-term sequelae. The integration and analysis of the very heterogeneous health data pose the challenge of building an innovative technological infrastructure as the foundation of a dedicated framework for data management that should address the regulatory requirements such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
Methods: The three participating Supercomputing European Centres (CINECA - Italy, CINES - France and HLRS - Germany) designed and deployed a dedicated infrastructure to fulfil the functional requirements for data management to ensure sensitive biomedical data confidentiality/privacy, integrity, and security.
Background: The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has demonstrated once again that rapid collaborative research is essential for the future of biomedicine. Large research networks are needed to collect, share, and reuse data and biosamples to generate collaborative evidence. However, setting up such networks is often complex and time-consuming, as common tools and policies are needed to ensure interoperability and the required flows of data and samples, especially for handling personal data and the associated data protection issues.
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