Harmonising and linking biomedical and clinical data across disparate data archives to enable integrative cross-biobank research
Spjuth, Ola; Krestyaninova, Maria; Hastings, Janna; Langhammer, Arnulf; Harris, Jennifer; Shen, Huei-Yi; Heikkinen, Jani; Waldenberger, Melanie; Ladenvall, Claes; Esko, Tõnu; Persson, Mats-Åke; Heggland, Jon; Dietrich, Joern; Ose, Sandra; Gieger, Christian; Ried, Janina S.; Peters, Annette; Fortier, Isabel; de Geus, Eco JC; Klovins, Janis; Zaharenko, Linda; Willemsen, Gonneke; Hottenga, Jouke-Jan; Litton, Jan-Eric; Karvanen, Juha; Boomsma, Dorret I; Groop, Leif; Rung, Johan; Palmgren, Juni; Pedersen, Nancy L; McCarthy, Mark I; van Duijn, Cornelia M; Hveem, Kristian; Metspalu, Andres; Ripatti, Samuli; Prokopenko, Inga
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2388239Utgivelsesdato
2015Metadata
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Sammendrag
A wealth of biospecimen samples are stored in modern globally distributed biobanks. Biomedical researchers worldwide need to
be able to combine the available resources to improve the power of large-scale studies. A prerequisite for this effort is to be able
to search and access phenotypic, clinical and other information about samples that are currently stored at biobanks in an
integrated manner. However, privacy issues together with heterogeneous information systems and the lack of agreed-upon
vocabularies have made specimen searching across multiple biobanks extremely challenging. We describe three case studies
where we have linked samples and sample descriptions in order to facilitate global searching of available samples for research.
The use cases include the ENGAGE (European Network for Genetic and Genomic Epidemiology) consortium comprising at least
39 cohorts, the SUMMIT (surrogate markers for micro- and macro-vascular hard endpoints for innovative diabetes tools)
consortium and a pilot for data integration between a Swedish clinical health registry and a biobank. We used the Sample
avAILability (SAIL) method for data linking: first, created harmonised variables and then annotated and made searchable
information on the number of specimens available in individual biobanks for various phenotypic categories. By operating on this
categorised availability data we sidestep many obstacles related to privacy that arise when handling real values and show that
harmonised and annotated records about data availability across disparate biomedical archives provide a key methodological
advance in pre-analysis exchange of information between biobanks, that is, during the project planning phase.