Browsing by Author "Rance, Bastien (23390302600)"
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Publication How ready are endocrine scientists to share retrospective clinical data for research: a perspective from the European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors(2025) ;Sojat, Antoan Stefan (57214798387) ;Rance, Bastien (23390302600) ;Neuraz, Antoine (55360975200) ;Fassnacht, Martin (6603031564) ;Beuschlein, Felix (6701652261) ;Robledo, Mercedes (57202556203) ;Luconi, Michaela (7003464354) ;Vassiliadi, Dimitra (24923678900) ;Stell, Anthony (9746765300) ;Igaz, Peter (6603935318) ;Dugic, Bogdan (59768600600) ;Marina, Ljiljana V. (36523361900) ;Burgun, Anita (7004335489) ;Kastelan, Darko (6602254863)Assie, Guillaume (23093042400)Objective: Individual patients' data sharing requires interoperability, security, ethical, and legal compliance. The aim was to assess the landscape and sharing capacities between endocrine researchers. Design: A standardized survey (SurveyMonkey®) with 67 questions was sent to European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors centers. Methods: Answers were counted as absolute numbers and percentages. Comparisons between inclusiveness target countries (ITC) and non-ITC (defined by Cooperation in Science & Technology Action) were performed using Fisher's exact test. Results: Seventy-three centers from 34 countries answered the survey. Electronic health record (EHR) systems are now the main source of data (90%). However, significant variability was reported, entailing >35 EHR providers, and variable data collected. Variable stakeholders' implication for enabling data sharing was reported, with more lawyers (P = .023), patient representatives (P < .001), ethicists (P = .002), methodologists (P = .023), and information technology experts (P < .001) in non-ITC centers. Implication of information technologies experts for data collection and sharing was underwhelming (33%). Funding for clinical research was higher in non-ITC than in ITC for clinical trials (P = .01) and for registry-based and cohort studies (P = .05). However, for retrospective studies addressing a specific clinical question, the funding was either very low (<10%) or nonexistent for both ITC and non-ITC (37% and 46%, respectively), with no dedicated funding for information technology (86%) and ethical and regulatory aspects (88%). Conclusions: In the absence of dedicated funding for retrospective research, current requirements for data sharing are obstacles. © The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of European Society of Endocrinology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication How ready are endocrine scientists to share retrospective clinical data for research: a perspective from the European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors(2025) ;Sojat, Antoan Stefan (57214798387) ;Rance, Bastien (23390302600) ;Neuraz, Antoine (55360975200) ;Fassnacht, Martin (6603031564) ;Beuschlein, Felix (6701652261) ;Robledo, Mercedes (57202556203) ;Luconi, Michaela (7003464354) ;Vassiliadi, Dimitra (24923678900) ;Stell, Anthony (9746765300) ;Igaz, Peter (6603935318) ;Dugic, Bogdan (59768600600) ;Marina, Ljiljana V. (36523361900) ;Burgun, Anita (7004335489) ;Kastelan, Darko (6602254863)Assie, Guillaume (23093042400)Objective: Individual patients' data sharing requires interoperability, security, ethical, and legal compliance. The aim was to assess the landscape and sharing capacities between endocrine researchers. Design: A standardized survey (SurveyMonkey®) with 67 questions was sent to European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors centers. Methods: Answers were counted as absolute numbers and percentages. Comparisons between inclusiveness target countries (ITC) and non-ITC (defined by Cooperation in Science & Technology Action) were performed using Fisher's exact test. Results: Seventy-three centers from 34 countries answered the survey. Electronic health record (EHR) systems are now the main source of data (90%). However, significant variability was reported, entailing >35 EHR providers, and variable data collected. Variable stakeholders' implication for enabling data sharing was reported, with more lawyers (P = .023), patient representatives (P < .001), ethicists (P = .002), methodologists (P = .023), and information technology experts (P < .001) in non-ITC centers. Implication of information technologies experts for data collection and sharing was underwhelming (33%). Funding for clinical research was higher in non-ITC than in ITC for clinical trials (P = .01) and for registry-based and cohort studies (P = .05). However, for retrospective studies addressing a specific clinical question, the funding was either very low (<10%) or nonexistent for both ITC and non-ITC (37% and 46%, respectively), with no dedicated funding for information technology (86%) and ethical and regulatory aspects (88%). Conclusions: In the absence of dedicated funding for retrospective research, current requirements for data sharing are obstacles. © The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of European Society of Endocrinology.
