RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences and FutureNeuro are co-leading, with University College Dublin, the Irish element of a new EU project to support the integration of genomics into healthcare and advance new treatments for patients.
Jointly funded by the European Commission, under the Digital Europe Programme, and the Health Research Board (HRB), Genomic Data Infrastructure (GDI) Ireland is part of a consortium of 20 EU Member States with the goal of enabling access to genomics and corresponding clinical data across Europe by creating secure data infrastructure. The project will facilitate a cross-border federated network of national genome collections for biomedical research and personalised medicine solutions.
GDI Ireland National Co-Lead, Prof Gianpiero Cavalleri, School of Pharmacy, RCSI, Professor of Human Genetics at RCSI and Deputy Director of the SFI FutureNeuro Research Centre, said: “By realising this federated analysis system, we will enable Irish genomes to be safely and securely analysed alongside similar datasets from other European countries. Such infrastructure can accelerate the discovery of genetic causes of disease and inform the development of much-needed treatments for conditions such as cancer that can have a devastating impact on our lives.”
The Irish GDI hub will establish best practice to manage the Irish genetic data, protecting the security of the personal data contributed by individuals. Work will be informed by the experience and technology developed by European partners.
The GDI project positions Ireland to participate in the ambitious Europe-wide ‘1+ Million Genomes’ initiative, which is driving the development, deployment, and operation of sustainable data-access infrastructures within each participating country.
Commenting on the announcement, Dr Mairead O’Driscoll, Chief Executive of the Health Research Board, said: “The GDI project brings together national agencies, research organisations, technology providers and patient organisations in 20 countries.
“The overarching goal is to design, develop and operationalise a cross-border federated network of national genome collections and other relevant data to advance data-driven personalised medicine for the benefit of European citizens.
“Ireland’s participation in this project will see our researchers, clinicians, patient representatives, experts in data governance, data analysts and others collaborating on a roadmap for data infrastructure in Ireland and conducting proof-of-concept work using synthetic data.”
Prof Cavalleri and Prof Denis Shields, University College Dublin, are Co-Directors of the GDI Ireland project with Prof Aedin Culhane (University of Limerick) and Prof Markus Helfert (Maynooth University) as co-applicants. The team will be supported by the SFI Centre for Research Training in Genomics Data Science, the Irish Platform for Patient Organisations and Industry (IPPOSI) and Health Research Charities Ireland (HRCI).
For further information on the project, visit: https://gdi.onemilliongenomes.eu/.