Information and video recording of the 'Introducing Inflammation and Immunity' webinar event held on Thursday 9 November 2023. Includes access to webinar materials such as the agenda, presentation slides and session transcript. About the eventThe purpose of the webinar was to:Introduce the programme to a wider audience;Showcase the team’s previous work in collaborative and standardised data curation for common respiratory conditions across the 4 UK nations;Provide an opportunity for audience members to either ask questions about the programme, or about what to expect when engaging with our partnered data providers (CPRD, DataLoch, Honest Broker Service and SAIL Databank)Find out more about how we work with our data providersVisit the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) websiteVisit the DataLoch websiteVisit the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) DatabankSpeakersProfessor Jenni Quint (Chair): Imperial College London, Inflammation and Immunity Co-directorMr Chris Orton (panellist & presenter): Population Data Science Programme Manager, Swansea University; Inflammation and Immunity Technical LeadMr Alan Harbinson (panellist): Principal Statistician and Head of the Honest Broker ServiceMs Sara Hatam (panellist): Data Analyst at DataLochDr Susan Hodgson (panellist): Head of Observational Research at CPRDWebinar recordingTimestamps Webinar section TimestampWhat is Inflammation & Immunity?00:00Showcasing collaborative and standardised data curation for common respiratory conditions10:03Audience Q&A Panellist introductions25:43 How do you access data from the data providers?27:17 How does someone correctly attribute the work that’s been done to date (e.g. using code lists) in future research?33:04 How could data within the data providers be used by industry to improve clinical trials?34:10 What have been some challenges in the harmonization process?What advice would you give someone who is just starting out with a different disease?39:26 Are there plans to map datasets from the 4 nations to a Common Data Model?42:15 What primary and secondary care data is available in each of the data providers?44:52 How can researchers and analysts effectively share their methodologies (e.g. codes, scripts) with a wider audience?49:51 How much does it cost to access data with each of the data providers?53:16 Can the data providers provide / link to social care data?56:58 Download the PowerPoint presentation (PDF)Download the transcript (TXT)Additional questionsUnfortunately, not all questions raised by our audience were answered live during the Q&A session. The two main reasons are:There was not enough time;Speakers answered some questions directly through ZOOM Webinar's Q&A boxThese questions are listed below. Click on them to read their responses that were gathered either through the Q&A function, or written answers our speaker's provided us after the webinar.Age-specific asthma prevalence seems to vary significantly across the three nations - what are the reasons?This question refers to slide 17 of the PowerPoint presentation.AnswerProvided by Sara Hatam, DataLoch.“We think CPRD asthma results differ from SAIL and DataLoch because patient IDs are given per patient GP registration in CPRD, so the bimodal distribution is likely to do with patients moving GP in adulthood and reporting historic childhood asthma cases or returning cases of asthma. While in SAIL and DataLoch, IDs are given per patient - rather than patient registration - so we can see more longitudinally their earliest case of asthma.”When will these results be available?Full question“Thanks Chris and Jenni, really great see progress so far. Do I gather you've now got combined (Eng, Scot, Wales) prevalence data for asthma, ILD and COPD? If so, when will these numbers be available to use and cite? We really need these numbers to create compelling, evidence-based arguments for greater investment in respiratory health services and respiratory research & innovation, particularly targeting policy makers and politicians in a pre-election year”AnswerProvided by Chris Orton, Swansea University / Inflammation and Immunity Driver Programme.The publications are hopefully imminent and so the findings will be available towards the end of the year, and building on this in 2024 will be more routine observational research providing ongoing outputs to feed in to policy and strategic direction in managing the conditions in scope (broadening to others like RSV, brochiectasis as well)What are your plans for public participation and information dissemination of your findings?AnswersPPI – Patient and Public InvolvementChris Orton, Swansea University / Inflammation and ImmunityWe have an active Patient and Public Involvement strand across all of our work, and will be involving patients in discussions around this research and its findings. Key publications will have lay summaries and we also hope to use blogs to talk about some of this work.Dr Susan Hodgson, CPRD“All applications to use the CPRD data must indicate any ‘patient or user group involvement’ in the planning and refinement stages, and/or in the interpretation of results, in their dissemination, and in informing plans for further work. This is reviewed as part of the Research Data Governance process to evaluate whether patient or user group involvement have been considered during different stages of the research. The CPRD Central Advisory Committee includes lay members to ensure the public/patient perspective is included in advice to CPRD on access to CPRD data for public health research purposes, and quality assurance for the Research Data Governance Process.”Useful linksFind out more about Inflammation and Immunity’s PPI workFind out more about PPI at SAIL DatabankDoes prescription data use a different harmonization process/ontology?Full question"Does prescription data use a different harmonization process/ontology? (e.g., BNF; SNOMED-CT; ATC)"AnswersSara Hatam, DataLoch“Different data providers had different ontologies for prescriptions: CPRD Aurum used dm+d, SAIL used Read, and DataLoch used BNF. Using NHS Technology Reference Update Distribution (TRUD), we found mappings from dm+d to BNF and ATC, but not to Read. Internally within SAIL there was a mapping from Read to ATC that was utilised.”Dr Susan Hodgson, CPRD“Product coding in CPRD GOLD uses Gemscript; CPRD Aurum uses the Dictionary of Medicines and Devices (DM+D). CPRD has developed code browser tools which are specific for the medical codes and product codes used in CPRD GOLD and CPRD Aurum primary care data which allow researchers to search for terms and build code lists. The code browsers enable flexible searches of:Read term/SNOMED description, Read/SNOMED code, CPRD medical code.Drug substance, product name (dm+d), Gemscript code, BNF code/heading, CPRD product code.ATC mapping is not part of the CPRD standard dictionaries.”How would you conduct a pan-UK data analysis?Full question“Could you please explain how pan-UK data analysis would work? E.g. would a researcher access each nation's data separately?”AnswerProvided by Chris Orton, Swansea University / Inflammation and Immunity Driver Programme.“Yes. At present it would be multiple access to TREs or datasets provided to replicate analysis across each nation - however - through work we are involved with, we are hoping that much of the ongoing epidemiology can be deployed through federated analytics, networking the data providers across the UK. This will eventually be through direct TRE connectivity where individual level data can be curated and analysed, but also through containerised queries to deploy out to TREs to get answers back on standardised, curated data underneath. Hopefully much more to say on this in 2024.”Do you offer collaborations with data linkage services outside HDRUK?Full question"Do you offer collaborations with data linkage services outside HDRUK (e.g. could you collaborate with data within HIC Dundee)?"AnswerProvided by Chris Orton, Swansea University / Inflammation and Immunity Driver Programme“Yes absolutely - obviously linkage in the true sense across UK nations wouldn't necessarily happen (person-based linkage), however including HIC as an example would be possible to incorporate their data into any analyses, subject to their access policies, and they're very much in scope for future federated analytics”Relevant linksFind out more about the Health Informatics Centre (HIC)Contact usFor questions or comments about the topics discussed during the webinar, please contact either our Technical Lead, Chris Orton or or Co-lead Investigator Jenni QuintEmail Chris OrtonEmail Jenni QuintFor other matters (e.g. accessing associated materials) please contact our Communications & Engagement Officer, Gabriella Linning.Email Gabriella LinningUseful linksFind out more about the BREATHE HubVisit the HDR UK websiteVisit the NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre websiteView the CPRD data access webpageView the DataLoch data application webpageView the SAIL data application webpageFind out more about CPRD’s plans for a TREFind out more about the EDEN InitiativeFind out more about the Cohort Discovery Search ToolPage publicationPage publication date: 15/11/2023Last updated: 15/11/2023 This article was published on 2024-09-24