Frontiers in Medicine (Apr 2024)

Health data space nodes for privacy-preserving linkage of medical data to support collaborative secondary analyses

  • Martin Baumgartner,
  • Martin Baumgartner,
  • Karl Kreiner,
  • Aaron Lauschensky,
  • Bernhard Jammerbund,
  • Klaus Donsa,
  • Dieter Hayn,
  • Dieter Hayn,
  • Fabian Wiesmüller,
  • Fabian Wiesmüller,
  • Fabian Wiesmüller,
  • Lea Demelius,
  • Lea Demelius,
  • Robert Modre-Osprian,
  • Sabrina Neururer,
  • Sabrina Neururer,
  • Gerald Slamanig,
  • Sarah Prantl,
  • Luca Brunelli,
  • Bernhard Pfeifer,
  • Bernhard Pfeifer,
  • Gerhard Pölzl,
  • Günter Schreier,
  • Günter Schreier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2024.1301660
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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IntroductionThe potential for secondary use of health data to improve healthcare is currently not fully exploited. Health data is largely kept in isolated data silos and key infrastructure to aggregate these silos into standardized bodies of knowledge is underdeveloped. We describe the development, implementation, and evaluation of a federated infrastructure to facilitate versatile secondary use of health data based on Health Data Space nodes.Materials and methodsOur proposed nodes are self-contained units that digest data through an extract-transform-load framework that pseudonymizes and links data with privacy-preserving record linkage and harmonizes into a common data model (OMOP CDM). To support collaborative analyses a multi-level feature store is also implemented. A feasibility experiment was conducted to test the infrastructures potential for machine learning operations and deployment of other apps (e.g., visualization). Nodes can be operated in a network at different levels of sharing according to the level of trust within the network.ResultsIn a proof-of-concept study, a privacy-preserving registry for heart failure patients has been implemented as a real-world showcase for Health Data Space nodes at the highest trust level, linking multiple data sources including (a) electronical medical records from hospitals, (b) patient data from a telemonitoring system, and (c) data from Austria’s national register of deaths. The registry is deployed at the tirol kliniken, a hospital carrier in the Austrian state of Tyrol, and currently includes 5,004 patients, with over 2.9 million measurements, over 574,000 observations, more than 63,000 clinical free text notes, and in total over 5.2 million data points. Data curation and harmonization processes are executed semi-automatically at each individual node according to data sharing policies to ensure data sovereignty, scalability, and privacy. As a feasibility test, a natural language processing model for classification of clinical notes was deployed and tested.DiscussionThe presented Health Data Space node infrastructure has proven to be practicable in a real-world implementation in a live and productive registry for heart failure. The present work was inspired by the European Health Data Space initiative and its spirit to interconnect health data silos for versatile secondary use of health data.

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