| Literature DB >> 27809812 |
Simone Benhamou1,2,3, Julia Bonastre4,5, Karine Groussard6,7, François Radvanyi8,9, Yves Allory10,11,12, Thierry Lebret13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bladder cancer is a very heterogeneous disease as regards natural history. Environmental exposures, constitutional genetic and/or epigenetic background may affect not only the likelihood of bladder tumor occurrence, but also the histologic type of cancer and its outcome. Currently, only a few data are available to study the prognostic role of genetic and environmental factors. Likewise, data on the economic burden of bladder cancer and the longitudinal impact of the disease and the treatments on patient quality of life are scarce.Entities:
Keywords: Biobanks; Biomarkers; Bladder cancer; Cohort study; Gene-environment interactions; Healthcare resource use; Molecular classification; Outcomes; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27809812 PMCID: PMC5094141 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2877-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Data collection
| Type of data | Data collected | Data Source |
|---|---|---|
| Epidemiology | (1) Sociodemographic characteristics: age, sex, place of birth, educational level, marital status, household income, working situation, history of residences and of occupations. | Face to face interview |
| Disease management | (1) Disease presentation: presence of symptoms (hematuria, pollakuria, dysuria, urgency, hydronephrosis), alteration of health status | Patient medical records |
| Pathology | (1) Histological type and subtype | Patient medical records |
| Resource use | (1) All hospitalizations: dates, type of facility, service, type of care and diagnosis-related group. | Patient medical records |
| Quality of life | (1) Generic measure: EuroQol EQ-5D-3 L questionnaire | Self-administered questionnaires |
Sample collection
| Time of collection | Sample | Derived products | Storage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enrollment | (1) Blood | DNA, RNA, PBMLs | −80 °C and liquid nitrogen |
| (2) Stabilized urine | DNA, RNA | −80 °C | |
| (3) Frozen tumor | DNA, RNA, proteins | −80 °C | |
| (4) Nail | Room temperature | ||
| 12 months after enrollment | (1) Stabilized urine | DNA, RNA | −80 °C |
| At each recurrence | (1) Frozen tumor | DNA, RNA, proteins | −80 °C |
PBMLs, peripheral blood mononuclear leukocytes; FFPE, formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded