| Literature DB >> 32194985 |
Gil Alterovitz1,2, Bret Heale3, James Jones1, David Kreda4, Fan Lin1,5, Lei Liu1, Xin Liu1, Kenneth D Mandl1,6, David W Poloway1, Rachel Ramoni7, Alex Wagner8, Jeremy L Warner9.
Abstract
The development of Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) Genomics, a feasible and efficient method for exchanging complex clinical genomic data and interpretations, is described. FHIR Genomics is a subset of the emerging Health Level 7 FHIR standard and targets data from increasingly available technologies such as next-generation sequencing. Much care and integration of feedback have been taken to ease implementation, facilitate wide-scale interoperability, and enable modern app development toward a complete precision medicine standard. A new use case, the integration of the Variant Interpretation for Cancer Consortium (VICC) "meta-knowledgebase" into a third-party application, is described.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical genetics; Data processing; Genomics; Health policy; High-throughput screening
Year: 2020 PMID: 32194985 PMCID: PMC7080712 DOI: 10.1038/s41525-020-0115-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Genom Med ISSN: 2056-7944 Impact factor: 8.617
Fig. 1FHIR Genomics workflow use case.
a A ServiceRequest instance; b a DiagnosticReport instance refers to Observations under “result”; c a MolecularSequence instance carries the reference sequence and variant information; d an Observation instance carries clinical interpretation; e additional Observations can carry further analysis information. Arrows depict the inter-resource pointers.
Fig. 2Example of SMART on FHIR application.
a Arrows show API calls integrating clinical and genomic data at the point of care with external information, for example, through the GA4GH streaming standard htsget.[33] b Screenshot of sample application showing associated drugs in the VICC meta-KB[22] for a given variant on a sample patient. Clicking a drug name provides a list of relevant publications, sorted by AMP/ASCO/CAP guideline levels of evidence.[23]