1. User-managed access
The solution to sharing data for research and innovation?
Ananda Plate
Executive Director, Patvocates Research
Board Member, Myeloma Patients Europe
Former Chair, WECAN
2. In contrast to healthy citizens, almost all rare disease patients want
to share their data for research – but fear misuse
If given the opportunity, would you be willing to make your/the person you care for health
information available for the purpose of:
97%
Developing
new treatments
for your
disease
97%
Improving
diagnosis for
your disease, or
suspected
disease
90%
Improving
research and
care on
diseases other
than yours
47%
fear risk of data
use in different
context from
where
disclosed
7%
see risk of
becoming victim
of discrimination
37%
would be ready to share data to
develop medicines and
treatments
Patients1
General
population2
(1) Rare disease patients’ perspectives on data sharing and data protection, Courbier et al. Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases (2019) (2) Attitudes towards data sharing, you Gov. (2018)
3. The GDPR opportunity: (Health) data to the people
Explicit consent for health data: Well-defined purpose, what
data is collected, who collects and processes it
Right to refuse: without detrimental consequence
Right to be forgotten: withdrawal of consent, deletion of data
Right of citizens to access and data portability: obtain
machine readable copies of all their personal data (personal,
shopping, medical, education, etc)
Right to rectification: correction of inaccurate data
Right to object: e.g. to direct marketing
4. Does the way we usually obtain consent
solve the issue?
At average reading speeds of 200 to 250 words per minute (wpm),
reading the terms of service before you agree to download the latest
app or software would take:
Service
Word
count
How many minutes to read?
(at 240 words per minute)
Microsoft 15,260 63.5
Spotify 8,600 35.8
TikTok 7,459 31.4
Zoom 6,891 28.7
Tinder 6,215 25.9
Uber 5,658 23.6
Twitter 5,633 23.5
Source: LePan, Visual capitalist (18 Apr 2020),
https://www.visualcapitalist.com/terms-of-service-visualizing-the-length-of-internet-agreements/
5. Patient organisations are ideal honest brokers
and custodians in data governance
Patient organisations…
are the ideal custodians on data governance (consent management, collection, data management, ownership,
security)
can enable all stakeholders on purposeful research without compromising patients’ privacy, preventing misuse
can ensure that research results are published irrespective of whether results are positive or negative
may even act as a cooperative or patient-led data commons to collect personal data, and agree that their
pseudonymized personal data is shared as a fiduciary with patient advocacy, academic, pharma or healthcare
system research
MIDATA.coop, POSMO.coop and similar data cooperatives as pilots and a model? Adapted from Prof. Ernst Hafen, ETH Zürich (2021)
Data Commons
[Pseudonymized data
of community members]
clinical medical genomic
PRO
sensors geolocation microbiome
preferences
Patient organisation
Clinical
researchers
Healthcare
providers
Industry
Regulators
Payers
Policy
makers
6. Patient-led mobile “registry”:
The “Know your CML” QoL app
Patient experience app, based on self-reported
data
Personal health record, including test results,
quality of life and side effect experience
QoL tracker based on validated EORTC QoL
PROM as well as PRO-CTCAE
Patient can report to physician about observed
toxicity and QoL at next visit
Patient can compare individual experience with
aggregate data of all other app users:
is my side effect rare? How are others doing?
Data can be used for research on real-world QoL
and toxicities
Source: CML Advocates Network, https://www.cmladvocates.net/know-your-cml/
7. Conclusions
In contrast to healthy citizens, almost all patients want to share their data for research – but fear
misuse and discrimination
Managing data and consent is not a purpose or value on its own for individual patients:
There needs to be a direct and personal „return on engagement“ (for their lifetime)
Patient organisations are ideal honest brokers and custodians in data governance and data
management to enable purposeful research, lawful and ethical data use, and publication of
results
Patient organisations can generate robust evidence that benefits individual patients
AND research
Ananda Plate
ananda@patvocates.net