Annual Meeting of the NCI Cohort Consortium (Abstract Submission): Submission #1

Submission information
Submission Number: 1
Submission ID: 149038
Submission UUID: 4887adc0-25b7-49bc-9b36-e79568cf7e92

Created: Fri, 08/15/2025 - 17:15
Completed: Fri, 08/15/2025 - 17:20
Changed: Fri, 08/15/2025 - 17:20

Remote IP address: 10.208.24.188
Submitted by: Anonymous
Language: English

Is draft: No
Lightning Talks Abstract
Konrad
Stopsack
Professor
MD MPH
Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research and Epidemiology – BIPS
An R Package for the Health Professionals Follow-up Study to Increase Accessibility and Reusability of Legacy Data Structures
  1. First Name: Konrad
    Middle Initial: H.
    Last Name: Stopsack
    Degree(s): M.D. M.P.H.
    Organization: Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research and Epidemiology – BIPS
  2. First Name: Hannah
    Middle Initial: E.
    Last Name: Guard
    Degree(s): M.S.
    Organization: Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  3. First Name: Caroline
    Last Name: Himbert
    Degree(s): Ph.D.
    Organization: Huntsman Cancer Institute
  4. First Name: Yuliya
    Last Name: Leontyeva
    Degree(s): Ph.D.
    Organization: Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  5. First Name: LeeAnn
    Last Name: Lucas
    Degree(s): M.S.
    Organization: Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  6. First Name: Colleen
    Middle Initial: B.
    Last Name: McGrath
    Degree(s): M.S.
    Organization: Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  7. First Name: Jane
    Middle Initial: B.
    Last Name: Vaselkiv
    Degree(s): M.P.H.
    Organization: Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
Background: With long-term follow-up of prospective cohorts, not just participants but also data structures and data pipelines age. Accessibility and reusability of such legacy data can be major barriers to analysis projects, compounded by analytic software with vendor lock-in.

Methods and Results: One approach to improving accessibility and reusability is the creation of open-source software that leaves the original data storage intact and provides well-documented, transparent translations of legacy data structures into modern data objects, which are then directly usable in reproducible analytic pipelines. The test case, presented here, is the R package {hpfs} for loading and reshaping data from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study. This software has been developed with a team-based approach, fully online and with collaboration and quality control supported by a version control system. This effort has required a deep understanding of the cohort data as well as emphasis on consistent software design. Initial application experience suggests that this approach eliminates some common pitfalls in analyses and provides major efficiency gains.

Conclusion: Transparent translations of legacy data by open-source software are one approach to substantially improve accessibility and reusability of valuable cohort data.