RWD/RWE Programming & Reporting Standards: Utilising OMOP Standards |
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Real-world data is a rich source of information that we are now starting to use for regulatory submissions. However, as the collection and validation of this data is less standard and restricted than clinical trial data, it poses a lot of challenges that we, as an industry, are not used to. Working with missing data, different analysis techniques, different dictionaries and data models poses challenges for our clinical and statistical programmers. During this Community forum we will dive , presenters dived into this and give examples of mapping and data handling in two ways (OMOP to SDTM and source/SDTM to OMOP). We will explore They explored the challenges of mapping to and from OMOP, which is a more open standard than SDTM and uses a stricter model with strict implementation guides. This Community Forum event took place over Zoom on 12 April 2023, 14:00–15:00(BST)/09:00–10:00 (EST). Join the post meeting discussions by adding your comments and questions to the Disqus forum below. Just log in with your Disqus, Facebook, Twitter or Google account to get started! |
Presenter | Bio |
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Berber Snoeijer, ClinLine Berber Snoeijer started in clinical research in 1997 as a biometrician and has since then worked with clinical data in different functions. In 2001 she started a CRO – Biometric Support – aimed at the data management, data analysis and reporting of clinical trials. In 2011 she started as an R&D manager dedicated to investigating and utilising the potential of real-world data from electronic health records. This resulted in many different solutions including a full reporting system to give feedback information to clinical research professionals. Berber is experienced with software and database engineering, process engineering and improving efficient utilisation and interaction of people based on management drivers. Nowadays, she uses these skills and knowledge to help life science companies assess, design and improve business solutions and processes at smaller and larger scales. | |
Mary Anne Rutkowski, Merck & Co Mary Anne Rutkowski is currently a Principal Scientist at Merck & Co in a Statistical Programming department, where her team provides high-quality programming analysis and reporting deliverables using real-world-data for non-interventional studies. She has been at Merck for over 30 years and during her first 25 years she had many roles, most of which were in programming groups that used clinical trial data for regulatory submissions or claims data for marketing analysis. Mary Anne recently joined the PHUSE Real-World Evidence Working Group. She has a bachelor’s degree in engineering, a master’s degree in computer science and a master’s degree in business administration. | |
Jerry Wang, Janssen Research and Development Jerry Wang is a data engineer in the Data Engineering & Analytics team of the Clinical & Statistical Programming Department at Janssen R&D. He is a technologically savvy statistical programmer, who is focusing on now identifying opportunities, driving optimisation and innovation, and applying traditional and cutting-edge approaches to clinical-related data analytics. Prior to this role, Jerry spent 10 years working with clinical data. | |
Mike Briganti, Janssen Research & Development Mike Briganti is a data engineer at Janssen R&D. Mike received his PhD in Public Health and MPH from Rutgers University, and his BA in Physics from the University of Maine. |
Catch up here! |
This Community Forum took place 12 April 2023. Catch up by viewing the recording. |