Hypocrisy Around Medical Patient Data: Issues of Access for Biomedical Research, Data Quality, Usefulness for the Purpose and Omics Data as Game Changer

被引:5
作者
Tantoso, Erwin [1 ]
Wong, Wing-Cheong [1 ]
Tay, Wei Hong [1 ]
Lee, Joanne [1 ]
Sinha, Swati [1 ]
Eisenhaber, Birgit [1 ]
Eisenhabert, Frank [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] ASTAR, Bioinformat Inst BII, 30 Biopolis St,07-01, Singapore 138671, Singapore
[2] Nanyang Technol Univ NTU, Sch Comp Sci & Engn SCSE, 50 Nanyang Dr, Singapore 637553, Singapore
关键词
Patient data privacy; Clinical patient data quality; Electronic health record; Omics data; Genome sequencing; BROAD CONSENT; CLINICAL-TRIALS; HEALTH-CARE; EPIDEMIOLOGY; ERA;
D O I
10.1007/s41649-019-00085-3
中图分类号
B82 [伦理学(道德学)];
学科分类号
摘要
Whether due to simplicity or hypocrisy, the question of access to patient data for biomedical research is widely seen in the public discourse only from the angle of patient privacy. At the same time, the desire to live and to live without disability is of much higher value to the patients. This goal can only be achieved by extracting research insight from patient data in addition to working on model organisms, something that is well understood by many patients. Yet, most biomedical researchers working outside of clinics and hospitals are denied access to patient records when, at the same time, clinicians who guard the patient data are not optimally prepared for the data's analysis. Medical data collection is a time- and cost-intensive process that is most of all tedious, with few elements of intellectual and emotional satisfaction on its own. In this process, clinicians and bioinformaticians, each group with their own interests, have to join forces with the goal to generate medical data sets both from clinical trials and from routinely collected electronic health records that are, as much as possible, free from errors and obvious inconsistencies. The data cleansing effort as we have learned during curation of Singaporean clinical trial data is not a trivial task. The introduction of omics and sophisticated imaging modalities into clinical practice that are only partially interpreted in terms of diagnosis and therapy with today's level of knowledge warrant the creation of clinical databases with full patient history. This opens up opportunities for re-analyses and cross-trial studies at future time points with more sophisticated analyses of the same data, the collection of which is very expensive.
引用
收藏
页码:189 / 207
页数:19
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