A SCOTTISH provider of data analysis software has signed a ten-year deal with one of the world’s best-known medical establishments – Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH).

Under the agreement Aridhia, which has bases in Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth University hospital and central Edinburgh, will deliver the research and innovation component of Great Ormond Street Hospital NHS Foundation Trust’s digital transformation programme.

GOSH will adopt Aridhia’s cloud-based data analysis platform AnalytiXagility as its digital research environment to enable, accelerate and transform how it manages its research projects. This service will be integrated with the trust’s new electronic patient record system.

The system is designed to enhance the way researchers access and analyse data in a secure and consistent fashion, and will enable teams to quickly access and extract value from data sources to accelerate the process of turning pioneering research into clinical practice.

Chris Roche, Aridhia’s CEO, said: “Great Ormond Street Hospital is world-renowned and it is an honour to be given the opportunity to support such extraordinary researchers deliver ground-breaking research across multiple clinical domains.

“For Great Ormond Street to select AnalytiXagility after a rigorous 12-month procurement process is great endorsement of our vision to accelerate clinical research.

“The trust was seeking a secure, scalable research platform that would allow their teams to collaborate on analysis and deliver rapid, auditable and reproducible results. AnalytiXagility satisfies these requirements. We are very much looking forward to working with them on this next stage of their research journey.”

Aridhia’s cloud-based platform provides a secure, neutral and supportive environment to conduct research and helps facilitate collaboration around data collection, curation, and management. It also offers access to an advanced suite of analytical tools and technologies.

Dr Peter Steer, chief executive of Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, added: “We look forward to working with Aridhia to develop an innovative platform which will transform the way we undertake and collaborate on research. This will allow us to bring more life-saving treatments to children with rare diseases in the UK and worldwide.”