Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Wednesday, September 08 2021 - 01:00
AsiaNet
First-of-its-Kind, Global Data Repository for Interstitial Lung Diseases Launches Through Academic and Industry Collaborative
HOLLAND, Mich., Sept. 7, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

-- The highly-anticipated Open Source Imaging Consortium (OSIC) database is 
driven by global experts in pulmonology, radiology and artificial intelligence, 
and is the most diverse and largest for rare fibrotic lung diseases

The Open Source Imaging Consortium (OSIC) (https://www.osicild.org/ ) today 
announced the launch of its global, data-rich repository of anonymized HRCT 
scans and clinical information regarding interstitial lung diseases (ILDs). 
This first-of-its-kind database is the world's largest and most diverse, with a 
plethora of real world clinical and imaging data that is both multi-ethnic and 
multi-center. The OSIC Data Repository 
(https://www.osicild.org/data-repository.html )currently houses close to 1,500 
anonymized and quality-controlled scans with accompanying data, and has an 
additional 5,000 in the quality control queue. It is on track to reach its goal 
of 15,000 anonymized scans, available to OSIC members, by first quarter 2022. 

OSIC – a global, 501(c)(3), not-for-profit cooperative effort between academia, 
industry and patient advocacy groups – was created to enable rapid, open source 
advances in the fight against idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), fibrosing 
ILDs, and other respiratory diseases, including emphysematous conditions. 
Radiologists, clinicians, computational scientists, and industry competitors 
from around the world collaborated for almost three years on the development of 
the database itself, and are working together to advance digital imaging 
biomarkers for accurate imaging-based diagnosis, prognosis and prediction of 
response to therapy. Any OSIC-created algorithms will be made open source for 
the benefit of patients everywhere.

"Building the OSIC repository has been a collaboration in its truest sense, 
with people from different disciplines, organizations, and countries all coming 
together on behalf of patients everywhere. This ability to collect and organize 
anonymized imaging and clinical data from across the world is the future of 
clinical science," said Dr. Kevin Brown, National Jewish Health & OSIC 
pulmonology lead. "We've seen efforts like this in common diseases, but nothing 
truly like it for rare diseases. As the OSIC database grows and we continuously 
learn from it, a real and substantial improvement in our ability to diagnose 
early, to predict outcomes, and to measure responses to therapy will be the 
result."

"In recent years, we have seen rapid developments in advanced medical imaging 
analysis, but a major obstacle to harnessing this technology used to study 
pulmonary fibrosis is the lack of large diverse imaging repositories needed for 
computer training," said Dr. Simon Walsh, National Heart and Lung Institute, 
Imperial College London & OSIC radiology lead. "OSIC addresses this unmet need 
by providing researchers with the data needed to develop AI-based applications 
for improving patient care and facilitating precision medicine. Being able to 
reliably predict how pulmonary fibrosis will progress in an individual patient 
would allow doctors to initiate appropriate treatment at the earliest 
opportunity and slow disease progression. It remains one of the most urgent 
challenges for effective management for patients with fibrotic lung disease."

The OSIC Data Repository (https://www.osicild.org/data-repository.html )was 
built with images and clinical data from a variety of sources, and every scan 
has been anonymized with a personal and automated quality control check. The 
organization is seeking additional scans from governmental agencies, patient 
advocacy groups, and through direct patient outreach. The database has been 
vetted by two global GDPR/HIPAA privacy firms, has Central IRB and multiple 
institution IRB approvals, and will be managed in compliance with all 
applicable privacy laws, regulations, consents and related restrictions.

"The future of medical research depends heavily on our ability to collate 
significant amounts of data, and make that data available for detailed and open 
scientific investigation. It's a proud moment that OSIC is at the forefront of 
this movement," said Dr. David Barber, University College London & OSIC 
computational science lead. "Data is the essence of scientific progress and the 
OSIC Data Repository (https://www.osicild.org/data-repository.html )already 
contains preliminary data rich enough to better understand the causes of 
disease, leading to better treatment and patient outcomes."

OSIC is steered by subject-matter experts Dr. Kevin Brown, Dr. Simon Walsh, and 
Dr. David Barber. It is also supported by an impressive list of global member 
institutions and partners, including the American Lung Association 
(https://www.lung.org/ ), EU-IPFF (https://www.eu-ipff.org/ ), PF Warriors 
(https://pfwarriors.com/ ), Action for Pulmonary Fibrosis 
(https://www.actionpf.org/ ), Boehringer Ingelheim 
(https://www.boehringer-ingelheim.com/ ), Siemens Healthineers 
(https://www.siemens-healthineers.com/ ), CSL Behring 
(https://www.cslbehring.com/ ), Galapagos (https://www.glpg.com/ ), FLUIDDA 
(https://www.fluidda.com/ ), Brainomix (https://www.brainomix.com/ ), National 
Jewish Health (https://www.nationaljewish.org/home ), National and Kapodistrian 
University of Athens (https://en.uoa.gr/ ), Universite de Lyon 
(https://www.universite-lyon.fr/ ), Hospices Civils de Lyon 
(https://www.chu-lyon.fr/ ), University of Vienna 
(https://www.meduniwien.ac.at/web/ ), National Hospital Organization Kinki-Chuo 
Chest Medical Center (https://kcmc.hosp.go.jp/ ), Royal Brompton and Harefield 
Foundation Trust (https://www.rbht.nhs.uk/ ), University of Arizona College of 
Medicine – Phoenix (https://phoenixmed.arizona.edu/about ), Pavilhao Pereira 
Filho – Santa Casa de Misericordia de Porto Alegre 
(https://www.santacasa.org.br/categoria/pavilhao-pereira-filho ), The Research 
Institute of St. Joe's Hamilton (https://research.stjoes.ca/ ), Thirona 
(https://thirona.eu/ ), Universita di Genova (https://unige.it/en/ ), 
Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli 
(https://www.policlinicogemelli.it/ ), VIDA Diagnostics (https://vidalung.ai/ 
), and imvaria (https://www.imvaria.com/ ).

To stay up-to-date on the latest OSIC news, visit https://www.osicild.org/  or 
follow the organization on Twitter at @OSICild (https://www.osicild.org/ ).

SOURCE  Open Source Imaging Consortium (OSIC)

CONTACT: Theresa Hennessey Barcy, theresa@tmhpublicrelations.com, 773-960-7276

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