Connecting healthcare and clinical research: Workflow optimizations through seamless integration of EHR, pseudonymization services and EDC systems

Bruland P, Doods J, Brix T, Dugas M, Storck M

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

In the last years, several projects promote the secondary use of routine healthcare data based on electronic health record (EHR) data. In multicenter studies, dedicated pseudonymization services are applied for unified pseudonym handling. Healthcare, clinical research and pseudonymization systems are generally disconnected. Hence, the aim of this research work is to integrate these applications and to evaluate the workflow of clinical research.We analyzed and identified technical solutions for legislation compliant automatic pseudonym generation and for the integration into EHR as well as electronic data capture (EDC) systems. The Mainzelliste was used as pseudonymization service, which is available as open source solution and compliant with the data privacy concept in Germany. Subject of the integration was the local EHR and an in-house developed EDC system. A time and motion study was conducted to evaluate the effects on the workflow.Integration of EHR, pseudonymization service and EDC systems is technically feasible and leads to a less fragmented usage of all applications. Generated pseudonyms are obtained from the service hosted at a trusted third party and can now be used in the EDC as well as in the EHR system for direct access and re-identification. The evaluation of 90 registration iterations shows that the time for documentation has been significantly reduced in average by 39.6 s (56.3{\%}) from 71 $\pm$ 8 s to 31 $\pm$ 5 s per registered study patient.By incorporating EHR, EDC and pseudonymization systems, it is now feasible to support multicenter studies and registers out of an integrated system landscape within a hospital. Optimizing the workflow of patient registration for clinical research allows reduction of double data entry and transcription errors as well as a seamless transition from clinical routine to research data collection.

Details about the publication

JournalInternational Journal of Medical Informatics
Volume119
Page range103-108
StatusPublished
Release year2018
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2018.09.007
Link to the full textPM:30342678; ISI:000447628900013
KeywordsARCHITECTURE; Data management; DOCUMENTATION; ELECTRONIC DATA CAPTURE; Health information systems; IMPLEMENTATION; INTERRUPTION; PATIENT RECRUITMENT; PROJECT; Pseudonymization; SECONDARY USE; SUPPORT; TIME; Workflow optimization

Authors from the University of Münster

Brix, Tobias
Institute of Medical Informatics
Bruland, Philipp
Institute of Medical Informatics
Dugas, Martin
Institute of Medical Informatics
Storck, Michael
Institute of Medical Informatics