
Lessons learned from a multi‑country federated analysis using OMOP in the Nordics (the VALO pilot) Passed
Tuesday May 5, 2026 16:10 - 17:00 F2
Lecturers: Carl Jarnling, Susanna FlahertyPanelists: Annemieke Ålenius, Ilona Ruotsalainen, Mikael Rinnetmäki
Track: Nordic Select
The Nordic region is uniquely positioned for collaborative health‑data research, thanks to universal healthcare systems and robust data infrastructures. The VALO NSCLC pilot study—funded by the Nordic Council of Ministers—set out to demonstrate the feasibility of federated analytics using the OMOP Common Data Model (CDM) across three university hospitals in Norway, Denmark, and Finland, with Sweden and Iceland as observers.
Importantly, the VALO NSCLC pilot is a key component of the broader VALO – Value from Nordic Health Data project, which (as described by Sitra) aims to establish common principles for implementing the European Health Data Space (EHDS) regulation in the Nordic countries, streamline RDI activities, and test cross‑border use of health data—with federated OMOP analyses as a practical mechanism to harmonise and utilise data across sites.
Key Lessons Learned:
- Technical Implementation: OMOP CDM adoption is a multi‑year journey, not a short‑term project. The pilot revealed that technical infrastructure compatibility and local environment configuration are more challenging than conceptual understanding. Reusable ETL solutions and systematic documentation are critical for accelerating future implementations.
- Data Availability: A three‑tier data‑readiness framework emerged. While basic clinical data (diagnoses, medications, demographics) are widely available, advanced oncology variables (biomarkers, performance status, patient‑reported outcomes) are systematically absent, limiting the feasibility of modern research.
- Governance and Coordination: Regulatory knowledge is fragmented and role‑dependent, creating risks for compliance and execution. Consortium‑wide coordination, especially for vocabulary versioning and governance, is essential for scientific validity in federated analyses.
- Operational Insights: The federated approach enabled analyses comparable to traditional multi‑site studies in a fraction of the time—but required substantial coordination overhead. The importance of dedicated project management, integrated cross‑functional teams, and real‑time communication infrastructure was underscored.
Recommendations for Future Nordic Collaboration:
- Invest in infrastructure alignment and technical‑environment assessment before project initiation.
- Standardize data capture for key prognostic variables, especially ECOG performance status, smoking history, and biomarkers.
- Establish consortium‑level governance for vocabulary synchronization and knowledge sharing.
- Adopt a phased capability‑development approach, recognizing the three‑year maturity curve for OMOP implementation.
- Prioritize feasibility assessments based on data‑tier requirements, and conduct cohort‑definition testing during protocol development.
Session Takeaways:
Participants will gain actionable insights into the practical realities of building a federated health‑data network in the Nordics. The session will provide a roadmap for overcoming technical, organizational, and governance challenges, and highlight strategic investments needed for sustainable, high‑impact collaborative research. The VALO pilot’s experience directly informs the broader VALO project’s mission to create a harmonized, value‑driven Nordic health‑data ecosystem. We will conclude with a discussion with key stakeholders sharing reflections and next steps for advancing OMOP conversions and federated analytics in Sweden.
Topic
Data and Information
Seminar type
Live + On site
Lecture type
Extended 55 min
Objective of lecture
Tools for implementation
Level of knowledge
Intermediate
Target audience
Management/decision makers
Politicians
Organizational development
Technicians/IT/Developers
Researchers
Students
Patient/user organizations
Keyword
Actual examples (good/bad)
Benefits/effects
Management
Innovation/research
Test/validation
Law, Judicial procedures
Government information
Informatics/Interoperability
Conference
Vitalis
Lecturers
Carl Jarnling Lecturer
Healthcare Director Sweden
IQVIA
Carl Jarnling is an experienced healthcare data and digital transformation professional that has been working in leading positions in both public and private organizations in Sweden. He is today building IQVIAs healthcare and government practice. Before IQVIA he was a manager at the Swedish eHealth Agency leading the work with the Covid certificates, Digital Vaccine Cards, Läkemedelskollen and connecting the Agency and Sweden to the MyHealth@EU infrastructure. Carl has a MSc in Medical Science from Karolinska Insitutet.
Susanna Flaherty Lecturer
Healthcare Director Finland
IQVIA
With more than 25 years of experience as a pharmacist, with an MBA and international leadership in global and local operational management, business development, thought leadership, quality management, medical affairs, and clinical operations within the CRO industry and pharmaceutical companies. Particularly, expertise in the healthcare landscape involving payers, providers and governance, global real-world data access, leading pharmacoepidemiology studies, client engagement, database and clinical study project management, quality management, and organizational change management. Overall, enthusiastic about improving patient outcomes and healthcare environments.
Annemieke Ålenius Panelist
Senior Advisor
E-hälsomyndigheten
Ilona Ruotsalainen Panelist
Senior Scientist
VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland
I work as a Senior Scientist in Health Data Analytics at VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland. My work focuses on the use of real‑world health data, particularly on integrating heterogeneous sources such as wearables, EHRs and medical imaging within regulated environments. I’m especially interested in ensuring that multimodal data integration is meaningful, usable in real‑world settings, and aligned with governance and regulatory requirements.
Mikael Rinnetmäki Panelist
Expert
Sitra
I'm a health data expert at the Finnish Innovation Fund Sitra and the founder of the diabetes healthtech startup Sensotrend.
At Sitra, I lead the VALO - Value from Nordic Health Data project that aims to harmonise EHDS implementation in the Nordic countries and essentially aims for a "Nordic Health Data Space."
I'm also the founder of the healthtech startup Sensotrend, focused on making life with diabetes easier. Sensotrend is a partner in large-scale EU projects i2X and MyHealth@MyHands, both focused on concrete EHDS implementations. We're also involved in the first experiments for reimbursement of digital health in Finland.
I volunteer in standards development work in HL7 Finland, HL7 Europe, and HL7 International.