1 / 11

BRIDG Overview: Specimen-Related Classes in BRIDG

This presentation provides an introduction to BRIDG and discusses the range of specimen-related classes in the model. It covers the key backbone classes, entities and role classes, relevant subclasses, and subsets of defined and performed activities.

Download Presentation

BRIDG Overview: Specimen-Related Classes in BRIDG

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Specimen-Related Classesin BRIDG BRIDG Overview for HL7 O&O WG Conference Call July 1, 2015 Wendy Ver Hoef NCI Contractor

  2. Overview Topics • Overview purpose: to give a brief introduction of BRIDG in preparation for future, more detailed discussions between BRIDG and O&O teams • BRIDG Background • What is BRIDG? • Project goals • Stakeholders • Recent Developments • Brief review of the range of Specimen-related classes in BRIDG • Key “backbone” (high level) classes for Specimen use cases • Entities and role classes involved in Specimen-related use cases • Relevant Material and Product subclasses • Subset of relevant Defined Activities • Subset of relevant Performed Activities

  3. BRIDG Overview • BRIDGstands for Biomedical Research Integrated Domain Group Model • Platform for expressing the processes and data concepts of biomedical research in a consistent manner across all the stakeholders. • Shared understanding of domain concepts represented (at present) as a UML class diagram. Hence, the reference to BRIDG as a model, aka a Domain Analysis Model or Domain Information Model • Goal: To produce a shared view of the dynamic and static semantics for the domain of basic, pre-clinical, clinical, and translational research and its associated regulatory artifacts. This domain of interest is further defined as: • The data, organization, resources, rules, and processes involved in the formal assessment of the utility, impact, or other pharmacological, physiological, or psychological effects of a drug, procedure, process, subject characteristic, biologic, cosmetic, food or device on a human, animal, or other subject or substance plus all associated regulatory artifacts required for or derived from this effort, including data specifically associated with post-marketing adverse event reporting.

  4. BRIDG Overview – Background • BRIDG is a collaborative effort engaging stakeholders from four organizations: • Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC) • US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) • HL7 BRIDG Work Group (HL7) • US National Cancer Institute (NCI) • International Standards Organization (ISO) • BRIDG is a UML Model built in Sparx System’s Enterprise Architect • Recent developments: • It is now an ISO standard (TC 215) – ISO 14199 • Creation of HL7 BRIDG Work Group in spring 2014 • Release 4.0 in March, 2015 (first release of translational research) • For more detailed information/downloads go to: www.bridgmodel.org

  5. Where to get more info on the BRIDG website • www.bridgmodel.org • The Download/View Model tab allows you to download BRIDG 4.0, the latest official release

  6. The BRIDG Harmonization Package • Follow the path: • Contributing to BRIDG tab • > Providing Semantics • > Harmonization Package • Contents may be useful in future discussions and work together

More Related