2020
DOI: 10.1159/000505289
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Translation of Digital Health Technologies to Advance Precision Medicine: Informing Regulatory Science

Abstract: The proliferation of digital technologies and the application of sophisticated data analysis techniques are increasingly viewed as having the potential to transform translational research and precision medicine. While digital technologies are rapidly applied in innovative ways to develop new diagnostics and therapies, the ultimate approval and adoption of these emerging methods presents several scientific and regulatory challenges. To better understand and address these regulatory science gaps, a working group… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Modern AI systems, including second-generation and beyond, are more flexible and can learn and adapt over time, which could make them more useful in medicine. To provide high-quality patient care, digital systems must provide a holistic approach that uses robust data and personalized parameters relevant to their healthcare needs [ 91 ].…”
Section: Digital Health Trends Over the Last Decade: First-generation...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Modern AI systems, including second-generation and beyond, are more flexible and can learn and adapt over time, which could make them more useful in medicine. To provide high-quality patient care, digital systems must provide a holistic approach that uses robust data and personalized parameters relevant to their healthcare needs [ 91 ].…”
Section: Digital Health Trends Over the Last Decade: First-generation...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Eighty percent of data remains silent as, in many cases, it is hard to take the data to the last mile toward the patient [ 145 ]. To provide meaningful information, the data must be translated into precision health [ 91 ]. It is possible for vulnerabilities, such as adversarial attacks and a lack of tools to regulate the quality of information and cybersecurity, to affect results negatively.…”
Section: Challenges In Healthcare Systems That Need To Be Accounted F...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, general concerns around data privacy and regulatory compliance-related restrictions as well as ethical and legal aspects must not be overlooked. When working with multi-omics and/or clinical data there are multiple data security, ethical, and personal information barriers that can present potential roadblocks ( Knowles et al, 2017 ; Adamo et al, 2018 ; Adamo et al, 2020 ). Moreover, each European country has its own national implementations of General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) for processing personal data ( Vlahou et al, 2021 ).…”
Section: Bottlenecks In the Application Of Multi-omics To Pmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Digital biomarkers, i.e., “consumer-generated physiological and behavioral measures collected through connected digital tools” ( 11 ) or “objective, quantifiable, physiological, and behavioral measures collected by means of digital devices that are portable, wearable, implantable, or digestible” ( 12 ), arguably have the potential of addressing at least some of the traditional biomarkers' limitations ( 13 , 14 ). Improvements in sensors, software, and algorithms, together with the increasingly widespread adoption of digital technologies in daily life, enable the gathering of key health-related data remotely, in non-invasive and seamless ways, blurring the boundaries between biomedical research and research participants' daily life ( 15 , 16 ). In other terms, digital devices enable “continuous measurements outside the physical confines of the clinical environment” ( 17 , 18 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%