Periodic Reporting for period 1 - IHEN PROJECT (INTERNATIONAL HUMAN EXPOSOME NETWORK PROJECT)
Período documentado: 2023-12-01 hasta 2025-05-31
stakeholders globally, which is essential for enhancing the impact of future exposome research. Specific objectives are to:
1) design the organisational structure of IHEN so that it serves to strengthen cooperation and coordination of exposome research in Europe and foster and align cooperation globally, including options for long-term governance and financing;
2) identify and make available exposome tools, metadata and resources at the global scale in a FAIR toolbox, including tool inventories and data catalogues;
3) test the FAIR toolbox via a series of demonstrator projects;
4) develop a roadmap for future exposome research and innovation, including the formulation of an operational definition of exposome research and an interim research agenda; and
5) effectively communicate and disseminate the IHEN Project results to a wide community of stakeholders, and develop an inventory of exposome training opportunities.
The project will interact, in all stages of the work, with key stakeholders’ groups: EU and global exposome researchers, initiatives and infrastructures; EU, national, and international agencies and organisations; funding bodies; civil society organisations; and industry.
WP3 established the Exposome Toolbox, by creating the inventory of exposome tools in the existing ELIXIR bio.tools platform and engaging with tool owners to submit tools to the toolbox. WP3 also improved two data points (i.e. MOLGENIS health data catalogue and Exposome Maps including geo-spatial exposome data) by increasing their coverage and implementing data standards. We drafted a controlled vocabulary to describe geo-spatial exposome data.
WP4 has progressed according to schedule. The demonstrators and the launch of the fellowships are providing the expected impact by developing collaboration and cooperation. Three demonstrator projects have been launched, including open calls for collaborations with researchers and institutions to submit metadata on existing exposome datasets for integration into MOLGENIS catalogue (with WP3). An ambassador`s fellowship linked to exposome research training has been launched with an open call, where 172 candidates applied (first training school planned in Oct 2025 at ISGlobal).
WP5 first developed a definition of the exposome and exposomics in line with the Banbury definitions. It consulted scientists and stakeholders to prepare an interim roadmap for research on the exposome. The report is expected to be finalized in summer 2025.
WP6 has developed the project’s visual identity, following an extensive consultation with partners and key stakeholders, and incorporated into all IHEN relevant materials. Additionally, the communication channels have been established, leading to the release of the IHEN Newsletter, and ongoing notifications for events, conferences, and training opportunities, providing the necessary exposure for the project.
By developing the Exposome Toolbox and actively engaging tool owners to submit their tools to this platform, WP3 has now created a location where (aspiring) Exposome researchers can have a good overview of the tools that are available to them. We have implemented DCAT and FAIR data point standards into IHEN health data catalogue to enable federated search with catalogues with other infrastructures such as EHDS, BBMRI and EUCAIM.
WP4 expects to build a group Ambassadors extending exposome research and training in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs), and that exposome methods are applied to datasets from LMICs. In addition, demonstrator projects will draw valuable lessons about the Exposome Toolbox.
The interim roadmap in WP5 identifies so-called “white spaces”, which are areas that have been under the radar of research programmes despite important relevance for health and environment. As an illustration, we identified needs for more research on the human health impacts of biodiversity loss as well as on the anticipated or unanticipated health consequences of circular economy.
For WP6, the convergence of the national and international networks on the exposome, such as NEXUS, ISEE, and others, has materialised quicker than anticipated, through targeted meetings of key stakeholders, messaging and communication. In turn, this has led to several high-profile international meetings on the exposome with global inclusivity – for example, the Exposome Moonshot Forum (May 12-15, 2025), the Exposome Momentum meeting (July 1, 2025) and others.