npj Digital Medicine (Oct 2024)

Enabling data linkages for rare diseases in a resilient environment with the SERDIF framework

  • Albert Navarro-Gallinad,
  • Fabrizio Orlandi,
  • Jennifer Scott,
  • Enock Havyarimana,
  • Neil Basu,
  • Mark A. Little,
  • Declan O’Sullivan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-024-01267-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Environmental factors amplified by climate change contribute significantly to the global burden of disease, disproportionately impacting vulnerable populations, such as individuals with rare diseases. Researchers require innovative, dynamic data linkage methods to enable the development of risk prediction models, particularly for diseases like vasculitis with unknown aetiology but potential environmental triggers. In response, we present the Semantic Environmental and Rare Disease Data Integration Framework (SERDIF). SERDIF was evaluated with researchers studying climate-related health hazards of vasculitis disease activity across European countries (N P1 = 10, N P2 = 17, N P3 = 23). Usability metrics consistently improved, indicating SERDIF’s effectiveness in linking complex environmental and health datasets. Furthermore, SERDIF-enabled epidemiologists to study environmental factors in a pregnancy cohort in Lombardy, showcasing its versatility beyond rare diseases. This framework offers for the first time a user-friendly, FAIR-compliant design for environment-health data linkage with export capabilities enabling data analysis to mitigate health risks posed by climate change.