Duggan Máire A, Anderson William F, Altekruse Sean, Penberthy Lynne, Sherman Mark E
*Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada †Divisions of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics ‡Cancer Control and Populations Sciences §Cancer Prevention, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD.
Am J Surg Pathol. 2016 Dec;40(12):e94-e102. doi: 10.1097/PAS.0000000000000749.
The Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program of the National Cancer Institute collects data on cancer diagnoses, treatment, and survival for approximately 30% of the United States (US) population. To reflect advances in research and oncology practice, approaches to cancer control are evolving from simply enumerating the development of cancers by organ site in populations to including monitoring of cancer occurrence by histopathologic and molecular subtype, as defined by driver mutations and other alterations. SEER is an important population-based resource for understanding the implications of pathology diagnoses across demographic groups, geographic regions, and time and provides unique insights into the practice of oncology in the US that are not attainable from other sources. It provides incidence, survival, and mortality data for histopathologic cancer subtypes, and data by molecular subtyping are expanding. The program is developing systems to capture additional biomarker data, results from special populations, and expand biospecimen banking to enable cutting-edge cancer research and oncology practice. Pathology has always been central and critical to the effectiveness of SEER, and strengthening this relationship in this modern era of cancer diagnosis could be mutually beneficial. Achieving this goal requires close interactions between pathologists and the SEER program. This review provides a brief overview of SEER, focuses on facets relevant to pathology practice and research, and highlights the opportunities and challenges for pathologists to benefit from and enhance the value of SEER data.
美国国立癌症研究所的监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)计划收集了约占美国人口30%的癌症诊断、治疗和生存数据。为反映研究和肿瘤学实践的进展,癌症控制方法正从简单地按人群中的器官部位列举癌症发展情况,演变为包括监测由驱动突变和其他改变所定义的组织病理学和分子亚型的癌症发生情况。SEER是一种重要的基于人群的资源,可用于了解不同人口群体、地理区域和时间内病理诊断的意义,并提供美国肿瘤学实践的独特见解,而这些见解是其他来源无法获得的。它提供组织病理学癌症亚型的发病率、生存率和死亡率数据,且分子分型数据正在不断扩展。该计划正在开发系统,以获取更多生物标志物数据、特殊人群的结果,并扩大生物样本库,以推动前沿癌症研究和肿瘤学实践。病理学一直是SEER有效性的核心和关键,在这个癌症诊断的现代时代加强这种关系可能会互利共赢。实现这一目标需要病理学家与SEER计划之间密切互动。本综述简要概述了SEER,重点关注与病理学实践和研究相关的方面,并强调了病理学家从SEER数据中受益并提高其价值的机遇与挑战。