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NIH expands biomedical research in the cloud with Microsoft Azure

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | July 21, 2021 Health IT
Microsoft Azure has joined the National Institutes of Health’s Science and Technology Research Infrastructure for Discovery, Experimentation, and Sustainability (STRIDES) Initiative as the newest cloud service provider to support biomedical research. The addition of this latest industry partner will further the STRIDES Initiative’s aim to accelerate biomedical research in the cloud by reducing economic and process barriers as well as providing cost-effective access to cloud platforms, training, cloud experts, and best practices for optimizing research in the cloud.

In just a few years, the STRIDES Initiative has expanded access to critical infrastructure and cutting-edge cloud resources for NIH researchers, as well as NIH-funded researchers at more than 2,500 academic institutions across the nation. To date, NIH has helped more than 425 research programs and projects leverage cloud resources through the STRIDES Initiative. Collectively, researchers have used more than 83 million hours of computational resources to access and analyze more than 115 petabytes of high-value biomedical data in the cloud. This is equivalent to 2.3 million four-drawer filing cabinets full of text.

By leveraging the STRIDES Initiative, the National Library of Medicine’s Sequence Read Archive (SRA) — one of the world’s largest, publicly available genome sequence repositories — migrated over 43 petabytes of “next generation” sequencing data to the cloud, easing access for millions of researchers. Using the cloud, researchers can now search the entire catalog of genomic data and take advantage of the computational tools for analysis.
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“The cloud can help democratize access to high-value research data and the most advanced analytical technologies for all researchers. Expanding our network of providers and access to the most advanced computational infrastructure, tools, and services provides the agility and flexibility that researchers need to accelerate research discoveries,” said Andrea T. Norris, Director of NIH’s Center for Information Technology and NIH Chief Information Officer. “Partnering with Microsoft Azure as a cloud service provider furthers our goals to enhance discovery and improve efficiency in biomedical research.”

“We often risk losing the value of biomedical data because of the sheer volumes being generated and digitized around the world. By leveraging cloud and artificial intelligence capabilities, biomedical researchers are able to quickly identify and extract critical, lifesaving insights from this sea of information,” said Toni Townes-Whitley, President, U.S. Regulated Industries, Microsoft. “We are honored to collaborate with the NIH to help researchers solve some of today’s biggest medical challenges, in support of a healthier and more sustainable global population.”

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