Acquisition, Analysis, and Sharing of Data in 2015 and Beyond: A Survey of the Landscape: A Conference Report From the American Heart Association Data Summit 2015.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A 1.5-day interactive forum was convened to discuss critical issues in
the acquisition, analysis, and sharing of data in the field of cardiovascular and
stroke science. The discussion will serve as the foundation for the American Heart
Association's (AHA's) near-term and future strategies in the Big Data area. The concepts
evolving from this forum may also inform other fields of medicine and science. METHODS
AND RESULTS: A total of 47 participants representing stakeholders from 7 domains (patients,
basic scientists, clinical investigators, population researchers, clinicians and healthcare
system administrators, industry, and regulatory authorities) participated in the conference.
Presentation topics included updates on data as viewed from conventional medical and
nonmedical sources, building and using Big Data repositories, articulation of the
goals of data sharing, and principles of responsible data sharing. Facilitated breakout
sessions were conducted to examine what each of the 7 stakeholder domains wants from
Big Data under ideal circumstances and the possible roles that the AHA might play
in meeting their needs. Important areas that are high priorities for further study
regarding Big Data include a description of the methodology of how to acquire and
analyze findings, validation of the veracity of discoveries from such research, and
integration into investigative and clinical care aspects of future cardiovascular
and stroke medicine. Potential roles that the AHA might consider include facilitating
a standards discussion (eg, tools, methodology, and appropriate data use), providing
education (eg, healthcare providers, patients, investigators), and helping build an
interoperable digital ecosystem in cardiovascular and stroke science. CONCLUSION:
There was a consensus across stakeholder domains that Big Data holds great promise
for revolutionizing the way cardiovascular and stroke research is conducted and clinical
care is delivered; however, there is a clear need for the creation of a vision of
how to use it to achieve the desired goals. Potential roles for the AHA center around
facilitating a discussion of standards, providing education, and helping establish
a cardiovascular digital ecosystem. This ecosystem should be interoperable and needs
to interface with the rapidly growing digital object environment of the modern-day
healthcare system.
Type
Journal articleSubject
AHA Scientific Statementsclinical trials
data
epidemiology
ethics
mobile health
preclinical
Access to Information
American Heart Association
Biomedical Research
Cardiology
Cardiovascular Diseases
Consensus
Cooperative Behavior
Data Mining
Databases, Factual
Diffusion of Innovation
Forecasting
Humans
Information Dissemination
Interdisciplinary Communication
Stroke
United States
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14989Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1161/JAHA.115.002810Publication Info
Antman, Elliott M; Benjamin, Emelia J; Harrington, Robert A; Houser, Steven R; Peterson,
Eric D; Bauman, Mary Ann; ... American Heart Association Data Sharing Summit Attendees (2015). Acquisition, Analysis, and Sharing of Data in 2015 and Beyond: A Survey of the Landscape:
A Conference Report From the American Heart Association Data Summit 2015. J Am Heart Assoc, 4(11). 10.1161/JAHA.115.002810. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14989.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Eric David Peterson
Fred Cobb, M.D. Distinguished Professor of Medicine
Dr Peterson is the Fred Cobb Distinguished Professor of Medicine in the Division of
Cardiology, a DukeMed Scholar, and the Past Executive Director of the Duke Clinical
Research Institute (DCRI), Durham, NC, USA.
Dr Peterson is the Principal Investigator of the National Institute of Health, Lung
and Blood Institute (NHLBI) Spironolactone Initiation Registry Randomized Interventional
Trial in Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction (SPIRRIT) Trial He is also
the Principal I
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