Abstract

With the development of information technology, patient information is stored as electronic data, and huge amounts of such data are collected every day. Such a collection compiled over the course of clinical practice is called real-world data and is expected to be used for evaluating drug efficacy and safety. Real-world data such as health insurance association-based administrative claims databases, pharmacy-based dispensing databases, and spontaneous reporting system databases are mainly used in pharmaceutical research. Among them, claims databases are used for various observational studies such as studies on nationwide prescription trends, pharmacovigilance studies, and studies on rare diseases due to their large sample size. Although the nature of omics data is different from that of real-world data, it has become accessible on cloud platforms and are being used to broaden the scope of research in recent years. In this paper, we introduce a method for generating and further testing hypotheses through integrated analysis of real-world data and omics data, with a focus on administrative claims databases.

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