+ All Categories
Home > Documents > NCI Informatics 2014

NCI Informatics 2014

Date post: 25-Feb-2016
Category:
Upload: kalin
View: 19 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
NCI Informatics 2014. Warren Kibbe w [email protected] 240-276-7300. The views expressed are my own and not a reflection of DHHS, NIH or NCI policy. Some history. Back to the dawn of time…my first BRIITE And some very emotional imagery. BRIITE 2001. November 16 and 17 th. BRIITE 2001. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
40
NCI Informatics 2014 Warren Kibbe [email protected] 240-276-7300 The views expressed are my own and not a reflection of DHHS, NIH or NCI policy
Transcript
Page 1: NCI Informatics 2014

NCI Informatics 2014Warren Kibbe

[email protected]

The views expressed are my own and not a reflection of DHHS, NIH or NCI policy

Page 2: NCI Informatics 2014

Some history• Back to the dawn of time…my first BRIITE

And some very emotional imagery

Page 3: NCI Informatics 2014

BRIITE 2001• November 16 and 17th

Page 4: NCI Informatics 2014

BRIITE 2001• November 16 and 17th

Page 5: NCI Informatics 2014

Fast forward to the end of 2011• BSA informatics working group assembled

in 2011• BSA IWG report of 2011• Ken steps down under enormous pressure

and criticism in December 2011• George Komatsoulis appointed acting

director• CBIIT is pounded by waves of uncertainty

Page 6: NCI Informatics 2014

CBIIT, 2013• 71 Federal staff• Serving 6500 NCI staff across 18 buildings• 5 petabytes of NCI data• 2.5 petabytes of TCGA data• 2- 5 MW new data centers• Just completed a rollout of Unified

Communications to 5000 NCI staff– 1.5 FTEs, now on loan to NIH CIT to deliver

UC to 45000 desktops

Page 7: NCI Informatics 2014

DHHS Requirements• FISMA Moderate• Complete move to IPv6 by Oct 2014• Data center consolidation• Two factor authentication • Only government furnished equipment (‘GFE’)

may connect to the network from outside (limits on VPN)

• Compensating controls…• Tiered network, appropriate traffic monitoring

and scanning

Page 8: NCI Informatics 2014

NCI General strategic objectives• Reduce cancer risk – public health• Improve cancer outcomes – better

treatment and survivorship• Educate providers and population• Provide informative data and powerful

examples

Page 9: NCI Informatics 2014

NCI CBIIT Guiding Principles• Supporting the mission of the NCI• Lowering barriers for the cancer

community• Promote the importance of informatics in

solving problems in public health, healthcare, precision oncology, and basic research

• Build communities around problems• Aggregate and disseminate knowledgeUsing computing technology to reduce

the incidence, suffering and mortality due to cancer

Page 10: NCI Informatics 2014

Highlights from the November National Cancer Forum Policy Summit

Page 11: NCI Informatics 2014

My outline

Disruptive technologies Getting socialWhat is big data?Open access to data

Page 12: NCI Informatics 2014

Disruptive Technologies

• Printing• Steam power• Transportation• Electricity• Antibiotics• Semiconductors &VLSI

design• http• High throughput biology

Systems view - end of reductionism?

Page 13: NCI Informatics 2014

Disruptive Technologies

• Printing• Steam power• Transportation• Electricity• Antibiotics• Semiconductors &VLSI design• http• High throughput biology• Ubiquitous computing

Everyone is a data providerData immersion

World:6.6B active mobile contracts1.9B smart phone contracts1.1B land linesWorld population 7.1B

US:345M active mobile contracts287M smart phone contractsUS population 313M

Page 14: NCI Informatics 2014

Getting Social• Measuring behavior across a population• Understanding behavior – can we provide

better risk estimates for individuals?• Social media is a big data opportunity – what

are the ethics of big data?• Synergize with the energy and immediacy of

patient advocates• Patients want more data sharing – how can

we facilitate that appropriately?This changes trial design – statistics until now has been focused on how to design an appropriate sample so that the sample can be generalized to the population – what happens when we measure the ENTIRE population ??

Page 15: NCI Informatics 2014

The future

• Elastic computing ‘clouds’• Social networks• Big Data analytics

• Precision medicine• Measuring health• Practicing protective medicine

Learning systems that enable learning from every cancer patient

Semantic and synoptic data

Intervening before health is

compromised

Page 16: NCI Informatics 2014

Open Data Access

• We need to provide data access to people outside of biomedicine who have the skills and training to mine and analyze data

• More access will mean more innovation

Page 17: NCI Informatics 2014

Precision Oncology

• The era of precision medicine and precision oncology is predicated on the integration of research, care, and molecular medicine and the availability of data for modeling, risk analysis, and optimal care

How do we re-engineer translational research policies

that will enable a true learning healthcare system?

Page 18: NCI Informatics 2014

Consent• In a learning healthcare system, we ‘learn’

from every patient who comes in for treatment. What is consent in this model? What is research?

• What role is there for standardized consent?• Are there ways to reimagine translational

research without consent? Would that help us?

Page 19: NCI Informatics 2014

CBIITs mission – the long form• CBIIT will help the cancer community

coordinate, aggregate, disseminate, promote cancer awareness, public health data, cancer risk reduction, novel treatments, quality of life and comparative effectiveness data, and basic and translational research outcomes

Page 20: NCI Informatics 2014

CBIIT strategic activities• Promote social media as a mechanism for

communication, education, and improving lifestyle choices

• Work productively with patient advocates• Understand risk factors leading to cancer• Support cancer models and modeling, e.g.

cancer initiation and progression• Promote precision oncology• Promote learning healthcare systems

Page 21: NCI Informatics 2014

Informatics strategic objectives• Lower barriers to data access, analysis

and modeling • Promote agility, flexibility, data liquidity• Promote Open Access, Open Data, Open

Source, Open Science• Promote semantic interoperability,

standards, CDEs and Case Report Forms

Page 22: NCI Informatics 2014

Informatics strategic objectives• Promote mobile and BYOD for patient reported

outcomes, education, surveillance, eligibility • Use informatics to improve and lower barriers

to clinical trials accrual• Use informatics to blur the distinction between

care and research – support clinical standards in research

• Identify and disseminate innovations and practices that make research more efficient and effective

Page 23: NCI Informatics 2014

Supporting Precision Oncology• Help bring together imaging, molecular,

pathology, labs, and clinical data in a highly structured and machine readable way to enable detailed characterization and action for individual patients

Page 24: NCI Informatics 2014

Learning Healthcare Systems• Enable the data flowing from precision

medicine to form learning healthcare systems, where we better characterize, model and predict the response, outcomes and quality of life for every cancer patient

Page 25: NCI Informatics 2014

Public Health• As a community we already know how to

prevent 50% of the current cancer burden world wide. Making more effective use of social media, mhealth approaches, virtual communities should enable us to impact vaccination rates (HPV, EBV, mono, hepatitis), and promote healthy lifestyles, including diet, exercise, and smoking cessation.

Page 26: NCI Informatics 2014

Public Health• These three factors - infectious disease,

smoking, and poor nutrition and exercise contribute to at least 50% of our current cancer burden. And the cost from loss of quality of life and pain and suffering is incalculable.

Page 27: NCI Informatics 2014

Lowering barriers for the community• Improve our patient-focused materials

dissemination technology. What is our Social Media strategy? Partnership with education and communication, healthcare organizations writ broadly.

Page 28: NCI Informatics 2014

Opportunities in prevention• How do we work together as a community

to make our prevention, communication and education researchers more effective and translate this to effect global change. We need to partner with social media and technology-savvy next generation behavioral psychologists!

Page 29: NCI Informatics 2014

Lowering barriers for the community• Simplify the creation and distribution of

CDE-based forms. Use existing medical terminologies (SNOMED, ICD, LOINC, RxNorm) whenever possible. Link every concept to UMLS as soon as feasible

Page 30: NCI Informatics 2014

Lowering barriers for the community• Simplify access to EVS, CDEs, NIC

Thesaurus (knowledge dissemination too!)– Ideally with NLM, CDISC, FDA, ONC, PCORI

as partners• Creative and appropriate security – we all

will need to live in a FISMA moderate world

• Simplify data access – move toward a ‘library card’ model?

Page 31: NCI Informatics 2014

Collaborate with patients• It is still a very rare event for patients or

even patient advocates to be involved during the planning or implementation of any cancer informatics project

• We need to do better if we are going to meet the needs of our patients

• When the requests are impossible for us to meet with our existing processes and workflow, it is time to re-design and re-implement!

Page 32: NCI Informatics 2014

Precision Oncology• As I mentioned with EVS and CDEs, we

need to incorporate clinical standards into research where ever and whenever appropriate

• Our ability to semantically reason and make inference over diverse data types is critical to realizing the goals of Precision Oncology

• NLP, ontologies, checklists, CDEs embedded in forms will let us move to next gen data capture

Page 33: NCI Informatics 2014

Enabling Analytics• If we have captured and annotated our

data using reasonable, well-defined semantics, this will enable data mining and discovery

Page 34: NCI Informatics 2014

Molecular Medicine• While this goes hand in hand with Precision

Medicine, it requires a focus on automated, well annotated data flows and multi-stage analysis/analytics. For instance, for next gen sequencing, there is primary stage data, secondary stage data, and tertiary stage data. These steps enable useful outputs, like BAM files, from each machine run. Imaging (functional MRI, high def optical, PET, CAT, etc) has similar (but more mature) data evaluation

Page 35: NCI Informatics 2014

Molecular Medicine• Incorporating molecular results into clinical

decision support is the end game. To make good decisions, we need to be constantly sampling and re-evaluating the latest outcomes. This dynamic model presents many problems – how do we do this with a high level of integrity and reliability while maintaining agility?

Page 36: NCI Informatics 2014

NCI activitiesJust a few…

• EVS, NCI Thesaurus, NCI Metathesaurus• CDEs, Case Report Forms• RAS Initiative – hub at NCI Frederick

Page 37: NCI Informatics 2014

NCI activitiesJust a few…

• NCI Cloud Pilot– How technically can we bring community

computation to large (2.5 petabyte) data sets– What is the sustainability model?

• TCGA re-imagined – Genomics Data Commons– Many technologies used, many different QA

and analysis pipelines– Standardization and re-analysis of existing data

Page 38: NCI Informatics 2014

NCI ActivitiesJust a few…

• MATCH trial– Initial findings from IMPACT– Couples molecular findings with a decision tree

for treatment• Cooperative Groups & GBC

– Navigator• FDA Clinical Trials Repository

– Janus– Collaboration with the NCI

Page 39: NCI Informatics 2014

CBIIT NCIP activities• Focus on clinical trials (MATCH, CTRP,

CTR)• Focus on translation • Focus on imaging• Focus on molecules• Moving all projects to true open source• Semantic Infrastructure: EVS, NCI

Thesaurus, Metathesaurus, CDEs, CRFs• HubZero as a collaborative space…

Page 40: NCI Informatics 2014

Questions?


Recommended