Baxter Nancy N, Daly Corinne, Gupta Sumit, Pole Jason D, Sutradhar Rinku, Greenberg Mark L, Nathan Paul C
Department of Surgery, St, Michael's Hospital, 30 Bond Street, Toronto, ON M5B 1W8, Canada.
BMC Cancer. 2014 Nov 3;14:805. doi: 10.1186/1471-2407-14-805.
Cancer is the leading cause of disease-related death in adolescents and young adults (AYA). Annual improvements in AYA cancer survival have been inferior to those observed in children and older adults. Prior studies of AYA with cancer have been limited by their focus on patients from select treatment centres, reducing generalizability, or by being population-based but lacking diagnostic and treatment details. There is a critical need to conduct population-based studies that capture detailed patient, disease, treatment and system-level data on all AYA regardless of treatment location.
METHODS/DESIGN: We will create a cohort of all AYA (aged 15-21 years) at the time of diagnosis with any malignancy between 1992 and 2011 in Ontario, Canada (n = 5,394). Subjects will be identified through the Ontario Cancer Registry and the final cohort will be expanded to include 2012 diagnoses, as these data become available. Detailed diagnostic, treatment and outcome data for those patients treated at a pediatric cancer centre will be provided by a population-based pediatric cancer registry (n = 1,030). For 15-18 year olds treated at adult centres (n = 923) and all 19-21 year olds (n = 3396), trained abstractors will collect the comparable data elements from medical records. We will link these data to population-based administrative health data that include physician billings, hospitalizations and emergency room visits. This will allow descriptions of health care access and use prior to cancer diagnosis, and during and after treatment.
The IMPACT cohort will serve as a platform for addressing questions that span the AYA cancer journey. These will include determining which factors influence where AYA receive care, the impact of locus of care on the types and intensity of cancer therapy, appropriateness of surveillance for disease recurrence, access to clinical trials, and receipt of palliative and survivor care. Findings using the IMPACT cohort have the potential to lead to changes in practice and cancer policy, reduce mortality, and improve quality of life for AYA with cancer. The IMPACT data platform will be a permanent resource, accessible to researchers across Canada.
癌症是青少年和青年(AYA)与疾病相关死亡的主要原因。AYA癌症生存率的年度改善情况不如儿童和老年人。此前对AYA癌症患者的研究存在局限性,要么侧重于特定治疗中心的患者,降低了研究结果的普遍性,要么基于人群但缺乏诊断和治疗细节。迫切需要开展基于人群的研究,获取所有AYA详细的患者、疾病、治疗和系统层面数据,无论其治疗地点如何。
方法/设计:我们将创建一个队列,纳入1992年至2011年期间在加拿大安大略省确诊患有任何恶性肿瘤的所有AYA(年龄15 - 21岁)(n = 5394)。通过安大略癌症登记处识别研究对象,随着2012年诊断数据的可得性,最终队列将扩大至纳入这些数据。由基于人群的儿童癌症登记处提供在儿童癌症中心接受治疗的患者的详细诊断、治疗和结局数据(n = 1030)。对于在成人中心接受治疗的15 - 18岁患者(n = 923)以及所有19 - 21岁患者(n = 3396),经过培训的摘要提取人员将从医疗记录中收集可比数据元素。我们将把这些数据与基于人群的行政健康数据相链接,这些数据包括医生账单、住院情况和急诊就诊情况。这将有助于描述癌症诊断之前、治疗期间及之后的医疗服务获取和使用情况。
IMPACT队列将作为一个平台,用于解决贯穿AYA癌症病程的各种问题。这些问题将包括确定哪些因素影响AYA接受治疗的地点、治疗地点对癌症治疗类型和强度的影响、疾病复发监测的适宜性、临床试验的参与情况以及姑息治疗和幸存者护理的接受情况。利用IMPACT队列得出的研究结果有可能导致实践和癌症政策的改变,降低死亡率,并改善AYA癌症患者的生活质量。IMPACT数据平台将成为加拿大各地研究人员可使用的永久性资源。