PO.PS01.05 · 人群科学
Feasibility of survey-based data collection in a diverse colorectal cancer cohort: Early-onset vs. average-onset
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摘要 Abstract
BACKGROUND: The incidence of early-onset colorectal cancer (EOCRC) is rising, yet a robust model of underlying factors across diverse populations is unknown. Most studies have examined a single factor or were performed in non-diverse population. The collection of comprehensive, patient-reported data across different populations in CRC will enable a deeper understanding of these associations to inform early intervention strategies.
METHODS: A pilot survey study was conducted at UT Southwestern Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center (SCCC) and its affiliated safety-net hospital, Parkland Health and Hospital System (PHHS). The objective was to evaluate the feasibility of a multidomain survey in colorectal cancer patients. Eligible patients (≥18 years, stage I-IV adenocarcinoma, diagnosed within 12 months) completed baseline surveys in English or Spanish on demographics, lifestyle, symptom burden, nutrition (Dietary History Questionnaire), quality of life (EORTC QLQ-30, CR29), and financial toxicity (COST-FACIT). Surveys were administered in REDCap at baseline and three months follow-up. The primary endpoint was survey completion; feasibility was assessed by recruitment, participation, and completion rates. Descriptive comparisons were made between EOCRC (<50 years) and average-age onset colorectal cancer (AOCRC; ≥50 years).
RESULTS: From March 2024 to April 2025, 66 patients were approached, and 60 (91%) consented; all completed the baseline survey (100%), confirming feasibility across academic and safety-net settings. However, for the three-month follow-up survey participation decreased by 50%. The cohort was evenly distributed by sex (48% female, 52% male) and site (50% Parkland, 50% UTSW). Participants were diverse (42% Hispanic, 18% Black, 42% Non-Hispanic White) with variable socioeconomic status: 38% reported income <$35,000, 23% >$100,000, 28% were unable to work, and 23% were employed. Hospital utilization differed: 96% of Non-Hispanic Whites were treated at SCCC, while most Hispanic and Black patients were seen at PHHS. Parkland Financial Assistance was reported by 77%, highest among Hispanic patients. Nineteen patients (32%) had EOCRC (median age 42, range 30-48) and 41 (68%) had AOCRC (median age 64, range 51-82). EOCRC patients were more often Hispanic (58% vs. 32%), treated at Parkland (58% vs. 46%), and received assistance more frequently (47% vs. 34%).
CONCLUSION: This pilot study confirms that comprehensive, survey-based data collection is feasible in a racially, ethnically, and financially diverse CRC cohort. These preliminary findings highlight the clinical and sociodemographic differences of EOCRC and AOCRC across distinct groups. Future work will expand longitudinal follow-up, incorporate electronic health record data, and leverage tumor registry phenotypes to enable low-touch, systematic patient recruitment for a more robust sample.
利益披露 Disclosure
C. F. Lopez, None..
L. Su, None..
L. Gonzalez, None..
Y. Liu, None..
R. Nair, None..
L. Cowell, None..
E. Huang, None..
S. M. Kazmi, None.