PO.PR01.02 · 预防研究

Biospecimen collections for cancer etiology and prevention research in the Connect for Cancer Prevention Study: Guiding principles, approach, and key metrics

海报缩略图:Biospecimen collections for cancer etiology and prevention research in the Connect for Cancer Prevention Study: Guiding principles, approach, and key metrics
编号 5098 展板 12 时间 4/21 09:00–12:00 区域 Section 37 主讲 Nicolas Wentzensen, MD;PhD
分会场 Early Detection and Interception
查看完整资料 下载 PDF 登录后可访问当前开放资料 AACR 官方页面 ↗

作者与单位

Nicolas A. Wentzensen1, Stephanie J. Weinstein2, Amanda Black3, Erin Schwartz2, Hannah P. Yang4, Michelle Brotzman5, Paul Albert2, Laura E. Beane Freeman2, Amy Berrington de Gonzalez6, Jonas S. Almeida2, Jonine Figueroa2, Montserrat García-Closas7, Nicole Gerlanc2, Gretchen L. Gierach8, Rena Jones9, Peter Kraft5, Autumn Hullings2, Charles E. Matthews10, Habibul Ahsan11, Brisa Aschebrook-Kilfoy12, Chun-Hung Chan13, Robert Greenlee14, Stacey Honda15, Benjamin A. Rybicki16, Blythe Ryerson17, Katherine Sanchez18, Mark A. Schmidt19, Kevin Skyes18, Larissa L. White20, Jeanette Ziegenfuss21, Stephen J. Chanock5, Christian C. Abnet22, Mia M. Gaudet1

1National Cancer Inst. Div. of Cancer Epidemiology & Genetics, Bethesda, MD,2National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD,3Staff Scientist, NCI-DCEG, Bethesda, MD,4Div. of Cancer Epidemiology & Genetics, National Cancer Inst., Bethesda, MD,5National Cancer Institute, Rockville, MD,6The Institute of Cancer Research, United Kingdom, London, United Kingdom,7The Institute of Cancer Research, London, United Kingdom,8Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Rockville, MD,9NCI, Bethesda, MD,10Investigator, Nutritional Epidem. Branch, NCI-DCEG, Bethesda, MD,11Professor, Dept. of Health Studies, Univ. of Chicago Cancer Research Ctr., Chicago, IL,12Univ. of Chicago Cancer Research Ctr., Chicago, IL,13Sanford Research, Sioux Falls, SD,14Marshfield Clinic Research Institute, Marshfield, WI,15Kaiser Permanente, Honolulu, HI,16Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI,17Kaiser Permanente, Atlanta, GA,18Baylor Scott and White, Dallas, TX,19Kaiser Permanente, Portland, OR,20Kaiser Permanente, Denver, CO,21Health Partners, Minneapolis, MN,22Investigator, Nutritional Epidem. Branch, National Cancer Institute, Rockville, MD

摘要 Abstract

Introduction The Connect for Cancer Prevention study is a new prospective cohort with repeated exposure assessment and long-term follow-up with the goals to study cancer initiation, multi-step carcinogenesis, early detection, and outcomes in a US study population. Over 85,000 participants have been recruited so far at 10 U.S. integrated healthcare systems. Biospecimens are a critical component to achieve Connect's goals. Designing biospecimen collections in prospective cohort studies needs to balance the desire for large, repeated collections of various biospecimens with participant burden and cost. Methods The biospecimen collection protocol was informed by literature review, expert consultations, and pilot studies evaluating the effect of pre-analytical factors on commonly measured biomarkers. Baseline biospecimen collection includes a blood draw with serum, plasma, cell-free DNA collection tubes, a urine collection, and a mouthwash sample. Biospecimen collection is performed at over 50 collection locations, including within the clinical phlebotomy infrastructure and dedicated research laboratories. All biospecimens are shipped to a NCI central laboratory for processing and long-term storage. Process metrics include sample completeness, sample deviations, temperature logging, and needle-to-processing time, among others. Repeated biospecimen collections to study different exposure windows and biomarker changes within individuals are planned every three years, with more frequent collections among participants age 50 and older to pursue cancer early detection aims. Results As of October 2025, 56,445 participants of 81,030 enrolled (70%) donated blood and urine samples, with additional collections underway. We observed higher proportions of biospecimen donations in older age groups, ranging from 56% among participants age 30-34 to 83% among 66-70 year olds. Biospecimen collection participation was similar by sex and race/ethnicity. Among the collections, 60% were from clinical sites, and 40% from research laboratories. 82% of biospecimens collected at research laboratories were received at NCI within one day, and over 95% of all biospecimens were received within 4 days. The return of home-collected mouthwash samples was 77% among those sent a kit. Among 422,000 biospecimen tubes collected, 94% were complete with no deviations recorded. Over 90% of participants submitted a short survey at the time or shortly after biospecimen collection. Conclusions The Connect Cohort for Cancer Prevention combines electronic health record data, state-of-the-art surveys, and repeated biospecimen collections to address critical questions on cancer etiology and prevention. We successfully implemented a robust and efficient biospecimen collection approach at 10 recruitment sites across the U.S.
利益披露 Disclosure
N. A. Wentzensen, None.. M. Brotzman, None.. A. Berrington de Gonzalez, None.. B. Aschebrook-Kilfoy, None.. R. Greenlee, None.. S. Honda, None.. B. A. Rybicki, None.. B. Ryerson, None.. K. Sanchez, None.. M. A. Schmidt, None.. K. Skyes, None.. L. L. White, None.. J. Ziegenfuss, None.. S. J. Chanock, None.

在会议检索中打开