This paper, presented at the 16th IEEE Symposium on Computer
Based Medical Systems (CBMS), is available in
PDF format
.
Access to biospecimens is essential for enabling cancer
biomarker discovery. The National Cancer Institute's (NCI)
Early Detection Research Network (EDRN) comprises and
integrates a large number of cancer research institutions into
a network in order to establish a collaborative scientific
environment to discover and validate disease markers. The
diversity of both the institutions and the collaborative focus
has created the need for establishing crossdisciplinary teams
focused on integrating expertise in cancer research,
computational and biostatistics, and computer science.
Given the collaborative design of the network, the EDRN
needed an informatics infrastructure. The Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center, the National Cancer Institute, and
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) teamed up to build an
informatics infrastructure creating a collaborative,
science-driven research environment despite the geographic and
morphologic differences of the information systems that
existed within the diverse network.
EDRN investigators identified the need to sha
re biospecimen
data captured across the country managed in disparate
databases. As a result, the informatics team initiated an
effort to create a virtual biospecimen database whereby
scientists could search and retrieve details about specimens
located at collaborating institutions. Each database, however,
was locally implemented and integrated into collection
processes and methods unique to each institution. This meant
that efforts to integrate databases needed to be done in a
manner that did not require redesign or re-implementation of
existing systems.