TY - JOUR
T1 - The florida pancreas collaborative next-generation biobank
T2 - Infrastructure to reduce disparities and improve survival for a diverse cohort of patients with pancreatic cancer
AU - Florida Pancreas Collaborative
AU - Permuth, Jennifer B.
AU - Dezsi, Kaleena B.
AU - Vyas, Shraddha
AU - Ali, Karla N.
AU - Basinski, Toni L.
AU - Utuama, Ovie A.
AU - Denbo, Jason W.
AU - Klapman, Jason
AU - Dam, Aamir
AU - Carballido, Estrella
AU - Kim, Dae Won
AU - Pimiento, Jose M.
AU - Powers, Benjamin D.
AU - Otto, Amy K.
AU - Choi, Jung W.
AU - Chen, Dung Tsa
AU - Teer, Jamie K.
AU - Beato, Francisca
AU - Ward, Alina
AU - Cortizas, Elena M.
AU - Whisner, Suzanne Y.
AU - Williams, Iverson E.
AU - Riner, Andrea N.
AU - Tardif, Kenneth
AU - Velanovich, Vic
AU - Karachristos, Andreas
AU - Douglas, Wade G.
AU - Legaspi, Adrian
AU - Allan, Bassan J.
AU - Meredith, Kenneth
AU - Molina-Vega, Manual A.
AU - Bao, Philip
AU - Julien, Jamii St
AU - Huguet, Kevin L.
AU - Green, Lee
AU - Odedina, Folakemi T.
AU - Kumar, Nagi B.
AU - Simmons, Vani N.
AU - George, Thomas J.
AU - Vadaparampil, Susan T.
AU - Hodul, Pamela J.
AU - Pablo Arnoletti, J.
AU - Awad, Ziad T.
AU - Bose, Debashish
AU - Jiang, Kun
AU - Centeno, Barbara A.
AU - Gwede, Clement K.
AU - Malafa, Mokenge
AU - Judge, Sarah M.
AU - Fleming, Jason B.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2021/2/2
Y1 - 2021/2/2
N2 - Background: Well-annotated, high-quality biorepositories provide a valuable platform to support translational research. However, most biorepositories have poor representation of minority groups, limiting the ability to address health disparities. Methods: We describe the establishment of the Florida Pancreas Collaborative (FPC), the first state-wide prospective cohort study and biorepository designed to address the higher burden of pancreatic cancer (PaCa) in African Americans (AA) compared to Non-Hispanic Whites (NHW) and Hispanic/Latinx (H/L). We provide an overview of stakeholders; study eligibility and design; recruitment strategies; standard operating procedures to collect, process, store, and transfer biospecimens, medical images, and data; our cloud-based data management platform; and progress regarding recruitment and biobanking. Results: The FPC consists of multidisciplinary teams from fifteen Florida medical institutions. From March 2019 through August 2020, 350 patients were assessed for eligibility, 323 met inclusion/exclusion criteria, and 305 (94%) enrolled, including 228 NHW, 30 AA, and 47 H/L, with 94%, 100%, and 94% participation rates, respectively. A high percentage of participants have donated blood (87%), pancreatic tumor tissue (41%), computed tomography scans (76%), and questionnaires (62%). Conclusions: This biorepository addresses a critical gap in PaCa research and has potential to advance translational studies intended to minimize disparities and reduce PaCa-related morbidity and mortality.
AB - Background: Well-annotated, high-quality biorepositories provide a valuable platform to support translational research. However, most biorepositories have poor representation of minority groups, limiting the ability to address health disparities. Methods: We describe the establishment of the Florida Pancreas Collaborative (FPC), the first state-wide prospective cohort study and biorepository designed to address the higher burden of pancreatic cancer (PaCa) in African Americans (AA) compared to Non-Hispanic Whites (NHW) and Hispanic/Latinx (H/L). We provide an overview of stakeholders; study eligibility and design; recruitment strategies; standard operating procedures to collect, process, store, and transfer biospecimens, medical images, and data; our cloud-based data management platform; and progress regarding recruitment and biobanking. Results: The FPC consists of multidisciplinary teams from fifteen Florida medical institutions. From March 2019 through August 2020, 350 patients were assessed for eligibility, 323 met inclusion/exclusion criteria, and 305 (94%) enrolled, including 228 NHW, 30 AA, and 47 H/L, with 94%, 100%, and 94% participation rates, respectively. A high percentage of participants have donated blood (87%), pancreatic tumor tissue (41%), computed tomography scans (76%), and questionnaires (62%). Conclusions: This biorepository addresses a critical gap in PaCa research and has potential to advance translational studies intended to minimize disparities and reduce PaCa-related morbidity and mortality.
KW - Biorepository
KW - Cancer disparities
KW - Pancreatic cancer
KW - Prospective cohort
KW - Underserved populations
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UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85100826948&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/cancers13040809
DO - 10.3390/cancers13040809
M3 - Article
C2 - 33671939
AN - SCOPUS:85100826948
SN - 2072-6694
VL - 13
SP - 1
EP - 24
JO - Cancers
JF - Cancers
IS - 4
M1 - 809
ER -