| Literature DB >> 31384607 |
Bannakij Lojanapiwat1, Ji Youl Lee2, Zhu Gang3, Choung-Soo Kim4, Ng Chi Fai5,6,7, Lukman Hakim8, Rainy Umbas9, Teng Aik Ong10, Jasmine Lim10, Jason L Letran11, Edmund Chiong12, Seung Hwan Lee13, Levent Türkeri14, Declan G Murphy15, Kim Moretti16, Matthew Cooperberg17,18, Robert Carlile19, Shiro Hinotsu20, Yoshihiko Hirao21, Tadaichi Kitamura22, Shigeo Horie23, Mizuki Onozawa24, Yasuhide Kitagawa25, Mikio Namiki26, Takashi Fukagai27, Jun Miyazaki24, Hideyuki Akaza28,29.
Abstract
The Asian Prostate Cancer (A-CaP) study is an Asia-wide initiative that was launched in December 2015 in Tokyo, Japan, with the objective of surveying information about patients who have received a histopathological diagnosis of prostate cancer (PCa) and are undergoing treatment and clarifying distribution of staging, the actual status of treatment choices, and treatment outcomes. The study aims to clarify the clinical situation for PCa in Asia and use the outcomes for the purposes of international comparison. Following the first meeting in Tokyo in December 2015, the second A-CaP meeting was held in Seoul, Korea, in September 2016. This, the third A-CaP meeting, was held on October 14, 2017, in Chiang Mai, Thailand, with the participation of members and collaborators from 12 countries and regions. In the meeting, participating countries and regions presented the current status of data collection, and the A-CaP office presented a preliminary analysis of the registered cases received from each country and region. Participants discussed ongoing challenges relating to data input and collection, institutional, and legislative issues that may present barriers to data sharing, and the outlook for further patient registrations through to the end of the registration period in December 2018. In addition to A-CaP-specific discussions, a series of special lectures were also delivered on the situation for health insurance in the United States, the correlation between insurance coverage and PCa outcomes, and the outlook for robotic surgery in the Asia-Pacific region. Members also confirmed the principles of authorship in collaborative studies, with a view to publishing original articles based on A-CaP data in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Asia; Cancer; Database; Prospective study; Prostate cancer; Registry
Year: 2018 PMID: 31384607 PMCID: PMC6664304 DOI: 10.1016/j.prnil.2018.06.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prostate Int ISSN: 2287-8882