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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Cancer

Date Submitted: Mar 10, 2025
Date Accepted: Aug 28, 2025

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

DermaDashboard: Bridging the Gap Between FHIR Standards and Clinical Usability

Borys KA, Hartmann EM, Idrissi-Yaghir A, Livingstone E, Lodde G, Schmidt CS, Winnekens P, Friedrich CM, Hisch R, Nensa F

DermaDashboard: Bridging the Gap Between FHIR Standards and Clinical Usability

JMIR Cancer 2025;11:e73691

DOI: 10.2196/73691

PMID: 41124568

PMCID: 12543034

DermaDashboard: Bridging the Gap Between FHIR Standards and Clinical Usability

  • Katarzyna Anna Borys; 
  • Eva Maria Hartmann; 
  • Ahmad Idrissi-Yaghir; 
  • Elisabeth Livingstone; 
  • Georg Lodde; 
  • Cynthia Sabrina Schmidt; 
  • Philipp Winnekens; 
  • Christoph M. Friedrich; 
  • RenĂ© Hisch; 
  • Felix Nensa

ABSTRACT

Objective:

The complexity of the Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) standard limits its direct usability for clinicians despite its transformative potential in healthcare data management. To bridge this gap, we aimed to describe the development of an interactive dashboard enabling non-technical users to intuitively build and analyze oncologic patient cohorts. By leveraging FHIR, we aimed to enhance data accessibility and interoperability in clinical practice.

Methods:

DermaDashboard builds on a Structured Query Language (SQL) database using a relational FHIR model, which ensures data compliance with the FHIR schema. A materialized view was assembled and optimized performance by providing only relevant data. The user interface was built with Grafana and supports intuitive data exploration. We applied DermaDashboard to the use case of melanoma, demonstrating its utility in real-world oncologic cohort analyses.

Results:

DermaDashboard was successfully built and integrated into the clinical environment, identifying 3,949 melanoma patients and corresponding to 82,783 electronic health records. The primary FHIR resources used were Patient, DiagnosticReport, and QuestionnaireResponse, and captured 54 data attributes, including demographics, histological classifications, genetic mutations, clinical and pathological staging, treatments, and procedures. Clinicians can filter the data using 29 variables to create specific subcohorts. The dashboard also enables operational insights by tracking annual trends in procedures and drug administrations.

Conclusions:

DermaDashboard enhances data accessibility for non-technical clinical users while showcasing the power of FHIR standardization in healthcare applications. By enabling oncological insights and identifying cohort discrepancies, it enhances both clinical decision-making and data quality.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Borys KA, Hartmann EM, Idrissi-Yaghir A, Livingstone E, Lodde G, Schmidt CS, Winnekens P, Friedrich CM, Hisch R, Nensa F

DermaDashboard: Bridging the Gap Between FHIR Standards and Clinical Usability

JMIR Cancer 2025;11:e73691

DOI: 10.2196/73691

PMID: 41124568

PMCID: 12543034

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