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Foundations - Life Sciences Lens

Foundations

LSREL01: How do you reliably anonymize, pseudo-anonymize, and re-identify sensitive life sciences data in a compliance-aligned manner?

Life sciences workloads often process sensitive and regulated datasets, such as genomic, biomarker, or clinical trial information. Data anonymization must balance privacy protection with scientific utility and reproducibility. Architectures should incorporate anonymization, masking, and encryption strategies that protect sensitive identifiers while preserving the ability to re-identify data when authorized. Controls must apply anonymization consistently, validate recoverability, and make audit evidence available for compliance-related purposes.

LSREL02: How do you maintain continuity of scientific workflows and data availability during lab system downtime?

Foundational research systems such as Laboratory Information Management Systems (LIMS), Electronic Lab Notebooks (ELN), Electronic Health Records (EHR) systems and scientific data repositories are critical to R&D productivity and data integrity in the life sciences domain. Downtime due to planned maintenance or unplanned outages can disrupt experiments, delay time-sensitive milestones, and compromise reproducibility. Resilient architectures that maintain high availability and robust data accessibility allow scientific workflows to continue while reducing the risk of lost progress or regulatory issues.

LSREL03: How do you provide resilient long-term storage and recovery of research and clinical data?

Life sciences organizations must verify that clinical trial and research data is securely retained and retrievable for extended periods. Retention requirements stem from regulatory, scientific, and business drivers, including reproducibility of research, regulatory audits, and the potential need to revisit datasets long after studies conclude. Reliable long-term storage strategies must address durability, immutability, data integrity, and efficient recovery at scale.

LSREL04: How do you verify your workload meets regulatory requirements for system reliability?

Life sciences workloads often operate under strict regulatory frameworks (FDA, EMA, ICH) that mandate specific reliability requirements. These may include system availability targets, data recovery capabilities, and business continuity provisions. Your reliability strategy should incorporate these regulatory requirements as foundational elements, with documented evidence of regulatory adherence.