Blockchain-Authenticated Sharing of Genomic and Clinical Outcomes Data of Patients With Cancer: A Prospective Cohort Study

BackgroundEfficiently sharing health data produced during standard care could dramatically accelerate progress in cancer treatments, but various barriers make this difficult. Not sharing these data to ensure patient privacy is at the cost of little to no learning from real-wo...

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Main Authors: Glicksberg, Benjamin Scott, Burns, Shohei, Currie, Rob, Griffin, Ann, Wang, Zhen Jane, Haussler, David, Goldstein, Theodore, Collisson, Eric
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-03-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:http://www.jmir.org/2020/3/e16810/
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spelling doaj-785865aaf9154b58abbd7b07a9c217442021-04-02T18:40:58ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712020-03-01223e1681010.2196/16810Blockchain-Authenticated Sharing of Genomic and Clinical Outcomes Data of Patients With Cancer: A Prospective Cohort StudyGlicksberg, Benjamin ScottBurns, ShoheiCurrie, RobGriffin, AnnWang, Zhen JaneHaussler, DavidGoldstein, TheodoreCollisson, Eric BackgroundEfficiently sharing health data produced during standard care could dramatically accelerate progress in cancer treatments, but various barriers make this difficult. Not sharing these data to ensure patient privacy is at the cost of little to no learning from real-world data produced during cancer care. Furthermore, recent research has demonstrated a willingness of patients with cancer to share their treatment experiences to fuel research, despite potential risks to privacy. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to design, pilot, and release a decentralized, scalable, efficient, economical, and secure strategy for the dissemination of deidentified clinical and genomic data with a focus on late-stage cancer. MethodsWe created and piloted a blockchain-authenticated system to enable secure sharing of deidentified patient data derived from standard of care imaging, genomic testing, and electronic health records (EHRs), called the Cancer Gene Trust (CGT). We prospectively consented and collected data for a pilot cohort (N=18), which we uploaded to the CGT. EHR data were extracted from both a hospital cancer registry and a common data model (CDM) format to identify optimal data extraction and dissemination practices. Specifically, we scored and compared the level of completeness between two EHR data extraction formats against the gold standard source documentation for patients with available data (n=17). ResultsAlthough the total completeness scores were greater for the registry reports than those for the CDM, this difference was not statistically significant. We did find that some specific data fields, such as histology site, were better captured using the registry reports, which can be used to improve the continually adapting CDM. In terms of the overall pilot study, we found that CGT enables rapid integration of real-world data of patients with cancer in a more clinically useful time frame. We also developed an open-source Web application to allow users to seamlessly search, browse, explore, and download CGT data. ConclusionsOur pilot demonstrates the willingness of patients with cancer to participate in data sharing and how blockchain-enabled structures can maintain relationships between individual data elements while preserving patient privacy, empowering findings by third-party researchers and clinicians. We demonstrate the feasibility of CGT as a framework to share health data trapped in silos to further cancer research. Further studies to optimize data representation, stream, and integrity are required.http://www.jmir.org/2020/3/e16810/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Glicksberg, Benjamin Scott
Burns, Shohei
Currie, Rob
Griffin, Ann
Wang, Zhen Jane
Haussler, David
Goldstein, Theodore
Collisson, Eric
spellingShingle Glicksberg, Benjamin Scott
Burns, Shohei
Currie, Rob
Griffin, Ann
Wang, Zhen Jane
Haussler, David
Goldstein, Theodore
Collisson, Eric
Blockchain-Authenticated Sharing of Genomic and Clinical Outcomes Data of Patients With Cancer: A Prospective Cohort Study
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Glicksberg, Benjamin Scott
Burns, Shohei
Currie, Rob
Griffin, Ann
Wang, Zhen Jane
Haussler, David
Goldstein, Theodore
Collisson, Eric
author_sort Glicksberg, Benjamin Scott
title Blockchain-Authenticated Sharing of Genomic and Clinical Outcomes Data of Patients With Cancer: A Prospective Cohort Study
title_short Blockchain-Authenticated Sharing of Genomic and Clinical Outcomes Data of Patients With Cancer: A Prospective Cohort Study
title_full Blockchain-Authenticated Sharing of Genomic and Clinical Outcomes Data of Patients With Cancer: A Prospective Cohort Study
title_fullStr Blockchain-Authenticated Sharing of Genomic and Clinical Outcomes Data of Patients With Cancer: A Prospective Cohort Study
title_full_unstemmed Blockchain-Authenticated Sharing of Genomic and Clinical Outcomes Data of Patients With Cancer: A Prospective Cohort Study
title_sort blockchain-authenticated sharing of genomic and clinical outcomes data of patients with cancer: a prospective cohort study
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2020-03-01
description BackgroundEfficiently sharing health data produced during standard care could dramatically accelerate progress in cancer treatments, but various barriers make this difficult. Not sharing these data to ensure patient privacy is at the cost of little to no learning from real-world data produced during cancer care. Furthermore, recent research has demonstrated a willingness of patients with cancer to share their treatment experiences to fuel research, despite potential risks to privacy. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to design, pilot, and release a decentralized, scalable, efficient, economical, and secure strategy for the dissemination of deidentified clinical and genomic data with a focus on late-stage cancer. MethodsWe created and piloted a blockchain-authenticated system to enable secure sharing of deidentified patient data derived from standard of care imaging, genomic testing, and electronic health records (EHRs), called the Cancer Gene Trust (CGT). We prospectively consented and collected data for a pilot cohort (N=18), which we uploaded to the CGT. EHR data were extracted from both a hospital cancer registry and a common data model (CDM) format to identify optimal data extraction and dissemination practices. Specifically, we scored and compared the level of completeness between two EHR data extraction formats against the gold standard source documentation for patients with available data (n=17). ResultsAlthough the total completeness scores were greater for the registry reports than those for the CDM, this difference was not statistically significant. We did find that some specific data fields, such as histology site, were better captured using the registry reports, which can be used to improve the continually adapting CDM. In terms of the overall pilot study, we found that CGT enables rapid integration of real-world data of patients with cancer in a more clinically useful time frame. We also developed an open-source Web application to allow users to seamlessly search, browse, explore, and download CGT data. ConclusionsOur pilot demonstrates the willingness of patients with cancer to participate in data sharing and how blockchain-enabled structures can maintain relationships between individual data elements while preserving patient privacy, empowering findings by third-party researchers and clinicians. We demonstrate the feasibility of CGT as a framework to share health data trapped in silos to further cancer research. Further studies to optimize data representation, stream, and integrity are required.
url http://www.jmir.org/2020/3/e16810/
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