학술논문

Blockchain-enabled immutable, distributed, and highly available clinical research activity logging system for federated COVID-19 data analysis from multiple institutions
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association. 30(6)
Subject
Distributed Computing and Systems Software
Information and Computing Sciences
Humans
Blockchain
COVID-19
Research
electronic health record
blockchain distributed ledger technology
clinical information systems
decision support systems
R2D2 Consortium
Engineering
Medical and Health Sciences
Medical Informatics
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Information and computing sciences
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveWe aimed to develop a distributed, immutable, and highly available cross-cloud blockchain system to facilitate federated data analysis activities among multiple institutions.Materials and methodsWe preprocessed 9166 COVID-19 Structured Query Language (SQL) code, summary statistics, and user activity logs, from the GitHub repository of the Reliable Response Data Discovery for COVID-19 (R2D2) Consortium. The repository collected local summary statistics from participating institutions and aggregated the global result to a COVID-19-related clinical query, previously posted by clinicians on a website. We developed both on-chain and off-chain components to store/query these activity logs and their associated queries/results on a blockchain for immutability, transparency, and high availability of research communication. We measured run-time efficiency of contract deployment, network transactions, and confirmed the accuracy of recorded logs compared to a centralized baseline solution.ResultsThe smart contract deployment took 4.5 s on an average. The time to record an activity log on blockchain was slightly over 2 s, versus 5-9 s for baseline. For querying, each query took on an average less than 0.4 s on blockchain, versus around 2.1 s for baseline.DiscussionThe low deployment, recording, and querying times confirm the feasibility of our cross-cloud, blockchain-based federated data analysis system. We have yet to evaluate the system on a larger network with multiple nodes per cloud, to consider how to accommodate a surge in activities, and to investigate methods to lower querying time as the blockchain grows.ConclusionBlockchain technology can be used to support federated data analysis among multiple institutions.