This policy has been approved by the UK Biobank Access Committee. Each application is considered by the UK Biobank Access and Scientific Teams, who in turn make a recommendation to the Access Committee, who then review the application.
- A researcher is required to make an application to UK Biobank for an exemption. Any applications from researcher, who are in some way non-compliant with UK Biobank’s procedures and Material Transfer Agreement (MTA) (for example in the filing of annual reports) are rejected.
- The researcher must set out the objective rationale for their exemption, including:
– The dataset required (which should be minimised where possible);
– Confirmation of data security arrangements; and
– The plans for uploading the completed analysis to the UKB-RAP. - Exemptions will be considered on the following basis:
– Lack of appropriate data tooling/applications/software available on the UKB-RAP;
– Insufficient compute power (for example availability of GPUs) available on the UKB-RAP; and
– Substantial cost (as a rough guide, substantive is taken to be in the ~£50,000 region) incurred by switching to the UKB-RAP.
Reasons not considered to be relevant include:
– requests for data harmonisation with external datasets that cannot be moved into UKB-RAP due to legal restrictions; and
– insufficient researcher funding. - The time period for an exemption is standardised: until the end of 2026 or until the project expires, whichever occurs first.
- Further, and depending on the nature of the data, there may be a location requirement to retain the data within a data environment which is geographically based within the UK/EEA. In the event that the exemption data contains health record linkage data, it will be a mandatory location requirement that such data is retained within a data environment which is geographically based within the UK/EEA. Any exemption containing health record linkage data will be notified by UK Biobank to NHS England.