Published December 4, 2022 | Version v1
Publication Open

Towards an Interoperable Ecosystem of Research Cohort and Real-world Data Catalogues Enabling Multi-center Studies

  • 1. ROR icon University of Groningen
  • 2. ROR icon University of Aveiro
  • 3. ROR icon McGill University Health Centre
  • 4. ROR icon Université de Bordeaux
  • 5. University of Utrecht
  • 6. ROR icon University Medical Center Utrecht
  • 7. ROR icon GlaxoSmithKline (United Kingdom)
  • 8. ROR icon University of Copenhagen
  • 9. Epigeny
  • 10. ROR icon INESC TEC
  • 11. ROR icon Agenzia Regionale di Sanità della Toscana

Description

Objectives: Existing individual-level human data cover large populations on many dimensions such as lifestyle, demography, laboratory measures, clinical parameters, etc. Recent years have seen large investments in data catalogues to FAIRify data descriptions to capitalise on this great promise, i.e. make catalogue contents more Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable. However, their valuable diversity also created heterogeneity, which poses challenges to optimally exploit their richness.

Methods: In this opinion review, we analyse catalogues for human subject research ranging from cohort studies to surveillance, administrative and healthcare records.

Results: We observe that while these catalogues are heterogeneous, have various scopes, and use different terminologies, still the underlying concepts seem potentially harmonizable. We propose a unified framework to enable catalogue data sharing, with catalogues of multi-center cohorts nested as a special case in catalogues of real-world data sources. Moreover, we list recommendations to create an integrated community of metadata catalogues and an open catalogue ecosystem to sustain these efforts and maximise impact.

Conclusions: We propose to embrace the autonomy of motivated catalogue teams and invest in their collaboration via minimal standardisation efforts such as clear data licensing, persistent identifiers for linking same records between catalogues, minimal metadata 'common data elements' using shared ontologies, symmetric architectures for data sharing (push/pull) with clear provenance tracks to process updates and acknowledge original contributors. And most importantly, we encourage the creation of environments for collaboration and resource sharing between catalogue developers, building on international networks such as OpenAIRE and research data alliance, as well as domain specific ESFRIs such as BBMRI and ELIXIR.

Files

Towards an Interoperable Ecosystem of Research Cohort and Real-world Data Catalogues Enabling Multicenter Studies_2023.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

Funding

European Commission
EHDEN – European Health Data and Evidence Network 806968

Dates

Accepted
2022-12-04