Previous Page  4 / 22 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 4 / 22 Next Page
Page Background

Notes:

Volume 2, Issue 2 (Suppl)

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases

ISSN: 2572-5548

Page 22

conferenceseries

.com

CO-ORGANIZED EVENT

August 31-September 01, 2017 Brussels, Belgium

&

International Conference on

Chronic Diseases

6

th

International Conference on

Microbial Physiology and Genomics

Preparation for precision medicine: International data sharing practice of two Chinese national data

sharing platforms

Jian Guan

Peking Union Medical College Hospital, China

A

dvances in genome sequencing together with big data analytic tools lead to the introduction of precision medicine

particularly in the field of oncology. To turn this promise into reality will require establishing a relationship between

phenotype data in EHRs, and genetic and expression data at the “omics” level in large scale, through computational frameworks,

enables the ability to clarify disease mechanisms in unprecedented detail; require individuals who will contribute extensive

amounts of medical, genetic, genomic, behavioral, phenotypic and biomarkers data, as well as lifestyle and other personal

information. Thus, this requires one of the main sources of ethical, legal and social concerns regarding personalized medicine.

In addition, data sharing at the patient-level is a potential financial pathway to obtain big data in healthcare. However, it is

difficult to share high-level data in practice. How to establish continued collaboration and long-term data sharing remains

unknown. We explore international collaboration of data sharing and propose potential governing principles and key

features for a managing system of expanded access to patient-level data after reviewing the practice of operating national data

sharing platforms. During the practice, we established win-win data sharing principles and regulation with legal and ethical

considerations. Under these principles, data sharing is conditional, and data providers are paid for data sharing and transfers.

Those who provide data that is shared in the platform should be fairly compensated when others use the data and derive

financial value from that usage, or offer other benefits for the sharing data (shown in Figure 1). In addition, based on the special

data sharing platform on oncology, the International Data Sharing and Mining Cooperating Group for Translational Oncology

(IDSMC Group) has been organized. The author believes that this collaboration will be of benefit for cancer patients around

the world.

Biography

Jian Guan completed her Doctor of Medicine at Peking Union Medical College (PUMC), China in 2001 and; Post-doctoral research work at Law Institute of Chinese

Academy of Social Sciences in 2012. Currently, she is a Professor of Management, Associate Professor of Pathology, and a Lawyer. She has her expertise in

“Big data healthcare and molecular pathology, medical law and ethics”. She is the Vice Executive Director of Clinical Data Centre, National Population and Health

Scientific Data Sharing Platform (National Program) and; PI of the International Data Sharing Platform on Translational Oncology (National Program). She is familiar

with molecular diagnosis and therapy of oncology. She is Managing Editor of

Frontiers in Bioscience

.

gjpumch@126.com

Jian Guan, Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis 2017, 2:2

DOI: 10.21767/2572-5548-C1-002