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Archiving electronic data: example from the NPEU Peter Brocklehurst National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit Oxford.

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Presentation on theme: "Archiving electronic data: example from the NPEU Peter Brocklehurst National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit Oxford."— Presentation transcript:

1 Archiving electronic data: example from the NPEU Peter Brocklehurst National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit Oxford

2 NPEU National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit Established 1978 by Department of Health Remit: Our aim is to conduct research with a view to providing information that can improve the health and welfare of babies, mothers and their families and promote the effective use of resources in the perinatal health services.

3 Perinatal research Pregnancy Newborn

4 ECMO

5 Projects Randomised controlled trials Disease registers Observational studies

6 NPEU trials Pregnancy –3 rd trimester ultrasound –Fetal movement –Cervical cerclage trial –Dublin Fetal Heart Rate Monitoring Trial –Collaborative eclampsia trial –BLASP –HOOP –Antenatal TRH trial –TEAMS –APPLE –PEACH –CAESAR –CORONIS –INFANT Newborn –ECMO –Dexamethasone trial –Ethamsylate –PHVD –OSIRIS –INIS –PROGRAMS –TOBY –ADEPT –NEST –BOOST-II UK –PREFER –Xenon www.npeu.ox.ac.uk/trials

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8 Birthplace To compare outcomes of births planned at home, in different types of midwifery units, and in hospital units with obstetric services Prospective cohort study of 60,000 births

9 Perinatal interventions Unique population Rapidly developing organism –Fetus –Preterm infant –Term infant Interventions (particularly drugs) can have long term effects which are unpredictable

10 Rare adverse outcomes Thalidomide Diethylstiboestrol

11 NPEU data Data are stored indefinitely –always fit for purpose because of unpredictable need for long-term follow-up includes identifiers

12 NPEU archiving All electronic datasets have been archived (from 1978) Complemented by archiving of paper documents –data collection forms, protocol, “print-outs”, published papers etc –library of existing datasets

13 Electronic archiving Challenges –Migration –Anonymisation –Access Ownership Sharing –Documentation

14 Migration 113 datasets ‘migrated’ from the University mainframe to Windows platform –mainly SPSS (SAS) files recreated as portable file format –plus original data in text files –three months work by senior programmer –on-going need to ensure that new version of software will read previous versions

15 Anonymisation Separation of identifiers and study data into separate files Making data available for sharing –dates and times (e.g. duration of labour, length of hospital stay etc) –Hospital names/codes –multiple pregnancy (triplets, quads etc) –sensitive data previous TOPS HIV status

16 Access Security Access for research

17 Security Limited access to data files –Passwords (changed regularly) –SOPs for gaining access specify duration of access purpose of access permission from Director or Chief Investigator emergency access

18 Access for research Other researchers –Re-analysis –Sub-group analysis –Sample size estimation –Individual patient meta-analysis

19 Access for research Ownership –Permissions ?Chief Investigator ?Steering Committee ?Funder ?Data guardian

20 Access for research Sharing –What information is needed to give permission? ?Study protocol ?Ethics approval ?Confidentiality agreement –Process of sharing What variables? Funding for work to extract dataset/anonymise –Transfer Data transfer regulations/legislation e.g. outside EU

21 Documentation Crucial activity at time of archiving –by people who have handled data/undertaken analysis –standardised Requires adequate resources –archiving usually occurs at end of project – often after project funded staff have left

22 Wish list Central University/National storage facility Guidelines (preferably national) setting standards for: –documentation –format –access –sharing


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