UK’s largest health research programme is aiming to transform the prevention, detection and treatment of some of the most common diseases – and the Microsoft Cloud will help

Lab technician using microscope

The UK’s largest ever health research programme, Our Future Health, which will create one of the most detailed pictures we’ve ever had of people’s health, is to use the Microsoft Cloud to securely store the huge amounts of data needed for the programme.

Our Future Health, a collaboration between the private, charity and public sectors – including the NHS – is building a community of five million volunteers from around the UK, who will give their permission to share health and health-related information about themselves with the aim of developing new ways to prevent, detect and treat diseases.

The programme will look at some of the leading causes of death and serious illness in the UK, including dementia, cancer, diabetes, heart disease, arthritis and stroke.

Our Future Health has now chosen Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform to enable the information collected from the volunteers to be processed for research purposes, and underpin websites and apps used by medical teams.

All of this will be contained in a Trusted Research Environment (TRE) provided by DNAnexus, which will sit in a UK Azure region. The TRE allows researchers to securely access and analyse data using a variety of bioinformatics and biomedical research tools, including genomic analysis.

DNAnexus and Microsoft will work together, however as with any project of this nature, Microsoft and DNAnexus will not have access to any of the data in the programme itself. The information will be de-identified, encrypted, stored and managed securely in the UK, in compliance with all applicable data protection laws and UK government policies for data protection.

Andrew Roddam, Chief Executive of Our Future Health, said: “We’re delighted that Microsoft will be working with us as a key technology partner and providing our cloud services. This will be an integral part of Our Future Health, underpinning so many important systems that are essential to the running of the programme and ultimately helping to create one of the most detailed pictures we’ve ever had of people’s health.”

Volunteers who join the programme, who will be aged over 18 and truly reflect the diversity of the UK population, will donate a small sample of blood, so researchers can study DNA information and biomarkers, fill in questionnaires about their health and lifestyles, and give permission for Our Future Health to securely link to their health records.

Doing this may hold the key to huge numbers of discoveries, such as:

  • New signals that could be used to detect diseases much earlier than is currently possible, leading to new or improved screening and prevention programmes and earlier treatment
  • New ways to predict with better accuracy who is at higher risk of diseases and would benefit from faster access to screening and prevention interventions
  • More targeted or personalised treatments, tools and technologies to delay the onset of disease, or change the course of disease progression; to reduce disease risks; and more targeted ways to investigate diseases for people at higher risk.

Jacob West, Managing Director of Healthcare and Life Sciences at Microsoft UK, said: “Healthcare teams across the world trust the Microsoft Cloud to deliver better experiences, insights and care, while managing and protecting health and personal data. Microsoft is proud to support Our Future Health’s work, which will provide research teams with a unique view into some of the most common and life-changing diseases that people face.”

The partnership with Our Future Health is the latest example of Microsoft’s work to support healthcare, biomedical research, precision medicine initiatives and clinical collaboration. In 2020, to all eligible organisations in England, including 1.2 million staff; large NHS trusts in Leeds and Birmingham are unlocking innovation and collaboration by moving to the Azure cloud; while two NHS surgeons in Northumbria are exploring how Microsoft AI can help reduce waiting times, support recommendations from healthcare teams and provide patients with better information so they can make more informed decisions about their own care.

Click here to learn more about Microsoft Cloud for Healthcare.

 

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