Back to Search Start Over

Harmonizing data on correlates of sleep in children within and across neurodevelopmental disorders: lessons learned from an Ontario Brain Institute cross-program collaboration.

Authors :
McPhee, Patrick G.
Vaccarino, Anthony L.
Naska, Sibel
Nylen, Kirk
Santisteban, Jose Arturo
Chepesiuk, Rachel
Andrade, Andrea
Georgiades, Stelios
Behan, Brendan
Iaboni, Alana
Wan, Flora
Aimola, Sabrina
Cheema, Heena
Gorter, Jan Willem
Source :
Frontiers in Neuroinformatics; 2024, p1-9, 9p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

There is an increasing desire to study neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) together to understand commonalities to develop generic health promotion strategies and improve clinical treatment. Common data elements (CDEs) collected across studies involving children with NDDs afford an opportunity to answer clinically meaningful questions. We undertook a retrospective, secondary analysis of data pertaining to sleep in children with different NDDs collected through various research studies. The objective of this paper is to share lessons learned for data management, collation, and harmonization from a sleep study in children within and across NDDs from large, collaborative research networks in the Ontario Brain Institute (OBI). Three collaborative research networks contributed demographic data and data pertaining to sleep, internalizing symptoms, health-related quality of life, and severity of disorder for children with six different NDDs: autism spectrum disorder; attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder; obsessive compulsive disorder; intellectual disability; cerebral palsy; and epilepsy. Procedures for data harmonization, derivations, and merging were shared and examples pertaining to severity of disorder and sleep disturbances were described in detail. Important lessons emerged from data harmonizing procedures: prioritizing the collection of CDEs to ensure data completeness; ensuring unprocessed data are uploaded for harmonization in order to facilitate timely analytic procedures; the value of maintaining variable naming that is consistent with data dictionaries at time of project validation; and the value of regular meetings with the research networks to discuss and overcome challenges with data harmonization. Buy-in from all research networks involved at study inception and oversight from a centralized infrastructure (OBI) identified the importance of collaboration to collect CDEs and facilitate data harmonization to improve outcomes for children with NDDs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16625196
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Neuroinformatics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177619699
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fninf.2024.1385526