Case Western Reserve University Center for Community Health Integration, 11000 Cedar Ave., Ste. 402, Cleveland, OH, 44106-7136, USA.
Case Comprehensive Cancer Center, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Cancer Causes Control. 2022 Jun;33(6):899-911. doi: 10.1007/s10552-022-01571-0. Epub 2022 Apr 5.
A disconnect often exists between those with the expertise to manage and analyze complex, multi-source data sets, and the clinical, social services, advocacy, and public health professionals who can pose the most relevant questions and best apply the answers. We describe development and implementation of a cancer informatics infrastructure aimed at broadening the usability of community cancer data to inform cancer control research and practice; and we share lessons learned.
We built a multi-level database known as The Ohio Cancer Assessment and Surveillance Engine (OH-CASE) to link data from Ohio's cancer registry with community data from the U.S. Census and other sources. Space-and place-based characteristics were assigned to individuals according to residential address. Stakeholder input informed development of an interface for generating queries based on geographic, demographic, and disease inputs and for outputting results aggregated at the state, county, municipality, or zip code levels.
OH-CASE contains data on 791,786 cancer cases diagnosed from 1/1/2006 to 12/31/2018 across 88 Ohio counties containing 1215 municipalities and 1197 zip codes. Stakeholder feedback from cancer center community outreach teams, advocacy organizations, public health, and researchers suggests a broad range of uses of such multi-level data resources accessible via a user interface.
OH-CASE represents a prototype of a transportable model for curating and synthesizing data to understand cancer burden across communities. Beyond supporting collaborative research, this infrastructure can serve the clinical, social services, public health, and advocacy communities by enabling targeting of outreach, funding, and interventions to narrow cancer disparities.
在有能力管理和分析复杂的多源数据集的人员,与能够提出最相关问题和最佳应用答案的临床、社会服务、宣传和公共卫生专业人员之间,往往存在脱节。我们描述了癌症信息学基础设施的开发和实施情况,旨在扩大社区癌症数据的可用性,以支持癌症控制研究和实践;并分享了经验教训。
我们构建了一个名为俄亥俄州癌症评估和监测引擎(OH-CASE)的多层次数据库,用于将俄亥俄州癌症登记处的数据与美国人口普查和其他来源的社区数据进行链接。根据居住地址为个人分配空间和位置特征。利益相关者的投入为根据地理、人口和疾病输入生成查询和输出按州、县、市或邮政编码级别汇总的结果的界面的开发提供了信息。
OH-CASE 包含了 2006 年 1 月 1 日至 2018 年 12 月 31 日期间在俄亥俄州 88 个县的 791786 例癌症病例的数据,这些县包含 1215 个市和 1197 个邮政编码。来自癌症中心社区外展团队、宣传组织、公共卫生和研究人员的利益相关者反馈表明,这种多层次数据资源的广泛用途可通过用户界面获得。
OH-CASE 代表了一种可用于管理和综合数据以了解社区间癌症负担的可移植模型的原型。除了支持合作研究外,该基础设施还可以为临床、社会服务、公共卫生和宣传社区提供服务,通过针对外展、资金和干预措施来缩小癌症差距。