| Literature DB >> 34806987 |
Leonard Greulich1, Stefan Hegselmann1, Martin Dugas2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medical research and machine learning for health care depend on high-quality data. Electronic data capture (EDC) systems have been widely adopted for metadata-driven digital data collection. However, many systems use proprietary and incompatible formats that inhibit clinical data exchange and metadata reuse. In addition, the configuration and financial requirements of typical EDC systems frequently prevent small-scale studies from benefiting from their inherent advantages.Entities:
Keywords: data interoperability; data standard; electronic data capture; metadata reuse; mobile health; mobile phone; open science
Year: 2021 PMID: 34806987 PMCID: PMC8663450 DOI: 10.2196/29176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Med Inform
Main requirements and subrequirements of OpenEDC. Subrequirements are based on commonly stated electronic data capture requirements in the literature. The main categorizing requirements and their definitions originate from the ISO/IEC 25010 norm [19].
| Requirement | Definition | Subrequirements |
| Functional suitability | Product or system provides functions that meet stated and implied needs when used under specified conditions |
Design [ Capture and store clinical data [ Form completion tracking [ Field validations (edit checks) [ Conditional fields (skip patterns) [ Multicentric (multisite) studies [ Longitudinal studies (with defined events) [ Multilingual forms [ |
| Availability | System, product, or component is operational and accessible when required for use |
Open source [ Minimal setup and configuration [ Distributed (near) real-time access [ Cross-platform (mobile device support) [ Offline-capable [ |
| Compatibility | Product, system, or component can exchange information with other products, systems, or components |
Standard-compliant import and export of metadata and clinical data [ Semantic annotation (medical coding) of items [ |
| Usability | Product or system can be used by specified users to achieve specified goals with effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction in a specified context of use |
Ease of use (user-friendly) [ Medical staff and patient accessibility [ |
| Security | Product or system protects information and data so that persons or other products or systems have the degree of data access appropriate to their types and levels of authorization |
Authentication and authorization (user rights and roles) [ Encrypted data storage and transmission [ Audit trail [ |
Figure 1User interface of the metadata design mode. The hierarchical order of metadata elements is represented by the centered column view (1). By means of a referencing system, electronic case report forms (eCRFs) can be reused entirely or partially (2). The language of eCRFs can be changed with the drop-down at the top left (3).
Figure 2User interface of the clinical data capture mode. Subjects can be managed with the left column where an audit trail can be accessed as well (4). Filled or empty circles in the 2 center columns indicate whether an event or form has been completed (5). A survey view button within the right electronic case report form column switches to a mode for patient-reported outcomes (6).
Figure 3Sequence diagram of a typical use scenario with OpenEDC. In this example, the stand-alone OpenEDC web application is used to design electronic case report forms and capture data. A Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium Operational Data Model file can be uploaded to reuse metadata or import clinical data. Optionally, the user can initialize an empty OpenEDC server with locally stored data. This enables the user to set up a multiuser system and conduct multicentric research studies. EDC: electronic data capture; ODM: operational data model.