Supporting Clinical and Translational Research with Informatics Thomas R. Campion, Jr., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Healthcare Policy and Research Assistant Professor of Healthcare Policy and Research in Pediatrics Associate Director, Research Informatics Information Technologies & Services Weill Cornell Medical College http://arch.weill.cornell.edu Analytics in Healthcare ASQ Long Island 303 - Hofstra University Symposium 11/05/2015
2 Overvi ew Introduction Research Computing at Weill Cornell Problem Architecture for Research Computing in Early accomplishments Discussion
Introduction: Research Computing at Weill Cornell 3 Conduct Administration Scientific Computing Research Informatics Research Administrative Computing Information Technology Infrastructure
4 Introducti on: Probl em Obtaining electronic health record () data for clinical and translational research is difficult Repurpose transactions for research Use one or more tools Understand strengths and limitations Obtain approval Optimal approaches are unknown Research Informatics can help investigators Obtain data Collect novel measures Integrate data
5 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery Research Repositories integrated with Interventions Consent WCMC-NYP-CUMC Sharing Ancillary Omics Secure Analysis Website: http://arch.weill.cornell.edu Integration Clinical Translation Scientific Computing Compliance & Planning
6 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery Research Repositories integrated with Integration
7 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery Research Repositories integrated with Integration
8
9 integrated with Dynamic Pull (DDP) Plus
10 integrated with
11 Architecture for Research Computing in Collegewide Cohort Discovery integrated with Contains data for 2.3 million patients Demographics Encounters Diagnoses Procedures Medications Vital signs Refreshed monthly De-identified
12 Architecture for Research Computing in Collegewide Cohort Discovery integrated with CTMS Other De-identified Contains data for 2.3 million patients Demographics Encounters Diagnoses Procedures Medications Vital signs Refreshed monthly Adding new sources and data types
13 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery based
14 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery based
15 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery based
16 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery based
17 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery based Other
18 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery Research Repositories based
Disparate Sources 19 Other
Disparate Sources 20 Centralized Integration Aggregate Transform Other
Disparate Sources Research Repositories (RDRs) 21 Centralized Integration Anesthesiology Aggregate Transform
Disparate Sources Research Repositories (RDRs) 22 Centralized Integration Aggregate Transform Center for Advanced Digestive Care
Disparate Sources Research Repositories (RDRs) 23 Centralized Integration Aggregate Transform Other Myeloid Malignancies
24 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery Research Repositories based Integration
25 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery Research Repositories based Model Integration Grumbach K, Lucey CR, Johnston SC. JAMA. 2014 Mar 19;311(11):1109-10.
26 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery Research Repositories based Interventions Model Integration Clinical Translation Grumbach K, Lucey CR, Johnston SC. JAMA. 2014 Mar 19;311(11):1109-10.
27 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery Research Repositories based Interventions Model Integration Clinical Translation Grumbach K, Lucey CR, Johnston SC. JAMA. 2014 Mar 19;311(11):1109-10.
28 Multiinstitutional Sharing Collegewide Cohort Discovery Research Repositories based Interventions Consent WCMC-NYP-CUMC Sharing Ancillary Omics Secure Analysis Website: http://arch.weill.cornell.edu Integration Clinical Translation Scientific Computing Compliance & Planning
29 Early Accomplishments: ARCH Program Discovery Hypothesis generation Patient counts Collection of novel measures Annotation of existing data Analysis Custom Research Repository Hypothesis testing sharing
30 Early Accomplishments: ARCH Program Enabled investigator-initiated pharmaceutical contract with large -based data set Facilitated trial recruitment using patients identified with i2b2 Provided data to citywide database for 2.3 million patients Leveraged suite of tools for various data initiatives data capture: 11 -based electronic data capture: 4 reporting: 11 Research data repositories: 3
31 Discussion Research Informatics can help investigators Obtain data Collect novel research data Integrate data ARCH matches investigators with right tools and services with respect to Study design sources Cost
32 Acknow l edgements Funding Clinical and Translational Science Center (UL1 TR000457-06) Joint Clinical Trials Office ARCH Leadership ITS Research Informatics Marcos Davila Steven Flores Deidre Phillips Jacob Weiser Curtis Cole, MD Stephen Johnson, PhD John Leonard, MD Vinay Varughese
33 Questi ons Tom Campion thc2015@med.cornell.edu http://vivo.med.cornell.edu/display/cwid-thc2015 http://arch.weill.cornell.edu