Department of Population Health Science and Policy and Institute for Translational Epidemiology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, One Gustave L. Levy Place, Box 1133, New York, NY, 10029, USA.
Department of Pathology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
J Transl Med. 2018 Oct 11;16(1):280. doi: 10.1186/s12967-018-1661-x.
World Trade Center (WTC) responders were exposed to mixture of dust, smoke, chemicals and carcinogens. Studies of cancer incidence in this population have reported elevated risks of cancer compared to the general population. There is a need to supplement current epidemiologic cancer follow-up with a cancer tissue bank in order to better elucidate a possible connection between each cancer and past WTC exposure. This work describes the implementation of a tissue bank system for the WTC newly diagnosed cancers, focused on advancing the understanding of the biology of these tumors. This will ultimately impact the modalities of treatment, and the probability of success and survival of these patients.
WTC Responders who participated (as employees or volunteers) in the rescue, recovery and cleanup efforts at the WTC sites have been enrolled at Mount Sinai in the World Trade Center Health Program. Responders with cancer identified and validated through linkages with New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut cancer registries were eligible to participate in this biobank. Potential participants were contacted through letters, phone calls, and emails to explain the research study, consent process, and to obtain the location where their cancer procedure was performed. Pathology departments were contacted to identify and request tissue samples.
All the 866 solid cancer cases confirmed by the Data Center at Mount Sinai have been contacted and consent was requested for retrieval and storage of the tissue samples from their cancer. Hospitals and doctors' offices were then contacted to locate and identify the correct tissue block for each patient. The majority of these cases consist of archival paraffin blocks from surgical patients treated from 2002 to 2015. At the time of manuscript writing, this resulted in 280 cancer samples stored in the biobank.
A biobank of cancer tissue from WTC responders has been compiled with 280 specimens in storage to date. This tissue bank represents an important resource for the scientific community allowing for high impact studies on environmental exposures and cancer etiology, cancer outcome, and gene-environment interaction in the unique population of WTC responders.
世贸中心(WTC)救援人员接触到了灰尘、烟雾、化学物质和致癌物的混合物。与一般人群相比,对该人群癌症发病率的研究报告称癌症风险增加。为了更好地阐明每一种癌症与过去 WTC 暴露之间的可能联系,有必要在世贸中心新确诊癌症的现有流行病学癌症随访基础上增加一个癌症组织库。这项工作描述了为 WTC 新诊断癌症建立组织库系统的实施情况,重点是推进对这些肿瘤生物学的理解。这最终将影响这些患者的治疗方式、成功和生存的可能性。
在世贸中心遗址的救援、恢复和清理工作中作为员工或志愿者参与的 WTC 救援人员已在西奈山医院参加了世界贸易中心健康计划。通过与纽约、新泽西、宾夕法尼亚和康涅狄格癌症登记处的联系确定和验证的癌症患者有资格参加这个生物库。通过信件、电话和电子邮件联系潜在参与者,解释研究、同意程序,并获取他们癌症手术的地点。联系病理学部门以确定和请求组织样本。
西奈山数据中心确认的 866 例实体癌病例均已联系,并要求同意检索和储存其癌症的组织样本。然后联系医院和医生办公室以定位和识别每位患者的正确组织块。这些病例大多是 2002 年至 2015 年期间接受手术治疗的外科患者的存档石蜡块。在撰写本文时,这导致 280 个癌症样本存储在生物库中。
迄今为止,已从 WTC 救援人员中编制了一个癌症组织生物库,其中储存了 280 个样本。这个组织库代表了科学界的一个重要资源,允许对环境暴露和癌症病因学、癌症结果以及 WTC 救援人员这一独特人群中的基因-环境相互作用进行高影响力的研究。