OHDSI/ETL-CDMBuilder

Name: ETL-CDMBuilder

Owner: Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics

Description: ETL-CDMBuilder is a repo containing a .NET application to perform ETL to OMOP CDMv4 for multiple databases

Created: 2014-12-03 22:33:40.0

Updated: 2017-12-30 07:02:57.0

Pushed: 2018-01-11 04:48:12.0

Homepage: null

Size: 59809

Language: C#

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README

The .Net CDM Builder was developed by Janssen Research & Development as a tool to transform its observational databases into the OMOP Common Data Model. The tool was specifically developed for the Janssen environment: SQL Server/Amazon Redshift/Amazon S3 as database and data storage platforms and Windows Servers and Microsoft.Net for running the application itself. Additionally, the builder logic designed is based on the input format of the source data that are loaded in our local environment. We have made the tool open-source as a reference for other researchers in the OHDSI community who may be looking ETL their observational data, but we do not expect the tool would execute successfully for others unless they have similar infrastructure and similar source datasets. The tool was not originally designed to support general purpose ETLs across different platforms, and modifications would be required to apply to other systems. Contributions from the community to advance the tool in that direction are welcome and encouraged, as our team cannot support and test the tool in other environments.

Technology

System Requirements (for each server that will be running CDM Builder)

Dependencies

Getting Started

Kicking off a Build

Getting Involved

License

ETL-CDMBuilder is licensed under Apache License 2.0

Development

Development status

Beta testing, source is not set up properly to deploy an executable this release.

Acknowledgements

Janssen Pharmaceutical Research & Development, LLC


This work is supported by the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Grant Number U24TR002306. This work is solely the responsibility of the creators and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.