NeoVault: empowering neonatal research through a neonate data hub
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Pigueiras-del-Real, Janet; Ruiz-Zafra, Ángel; Benavente-Fernández, Isabel; Lubián-López, Simón P.; Hussain Shah, Syed Adil; Hussain Shah, Syed Taimoor; C. Gontard, LionelEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Preterm Data hub Pose tracking
Fecha
2024-11-30Referencia bibliográfica
Pigueiras del Real, J. et. al. BMC Pediatrics (2024) 24:787. [https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-024-05276-y]
Patrocinador
Universidad de Cádiz/CBUA; European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Maria Sklodowska-Curie Innovative Training Network 202, Grant Agreement Nº 956394; Spanish R&D projects funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 GOMINOLA (Grant PID2020-118112RB-C21 and Grant PID2020-118112RB-C22)Resumen
Background Stability during early postnatal life in preterm infants is related to better outcomes. Although vital signs
are monitored continuously in Neonatal Intensive Care Unites, this monitoring does not include all physiological
parameters nor data such as movement patterns. Although there are scattered sources of data, there is no centralized
data hub for neonates information.
Results We have created the first neonate data hub for easy and interactive access to upload or download postural,
physiological, and medical data of neonates: NeoVault. NeoVault is a platform that provides access to information
through two interfaces: 1) via a Web interface (designed for medical personnel, data scientists, researchers); and 2)
via a RESTful API (Application Programming Interfaces) -designed for developers-, aiming to integrate access to information
into third-party applications. The web access allows searching and filtering according to specific parameters,
visualization of data through graphs and images, and generation of datasets in CSV format. Access through the RESTful
API is described in OpenAPI, enabling access to information from any device, facilitating it in an interoperable
format. Currently, it contains nearly 800,000 postural records and 3.000 physiological data entries. The physiological
and postural data stored for each neonate in NeoVault are collected through the NRP (Neonates Recording Platform)
tool, which allows for the automatic and reliable collection of data.
Conclusion NeoVault is an open platform for simple access to postural, physiological, and medical data of neonates
that can be utilized by researchers, data scientists, medical personnel, and programmers. It enables integration
into third-party applications and the generation of customized datasets.