| Literature DB >> 34363009 |
Vadim S Koshkin1, Vaibhav G Patel2, Alicia Ali3, Mehmet A Bilen4, Deepak Ravindranathan4, Joseph J Park3, Olesia Kellezi3, Marcin Cieslik3, Justin Shaya5, Angelo Cabal5, Landon Brown6, Matthew Labriola6, Laura S Graham7, Colin Pritchard7, Abhishek Tripathi8, Sanober Nusrat8, Pedro Barata9, Albert Jang9, Shuang R Chen9, Rohan Garje10, Luna Acharya10, Clara Hwang11, Amanda Pilling11, William Oh2, Tomi Jun2, Divya Natesan1, Chris Nguyen1, Deepak Kilari12, Michael Pierro12, Bicky Thapa12, Frank Cackowski13, Alleda Mack13, Elisabeth Heath13, Catherine H Marshall14, Scott T Tagawa15, Susan Halabi6, Michael T Schweizer7, Andrew Armstrong6, Tanya Dorff16, Ajjai Alva3, Rana McKay17.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Prostate cancer is a heterogeneous disease with variable clinical outcomes. Despite numerous recent approvals of novel therapies, castration-resistant prostate cancer remains lethal. A "real-world" clinical-genomic database is urgently needed to enhance our characterization of advanced prostate cancer and further enable precision oncology.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34363009 PMCID: PMC9385488 DOI: 10.1038/s41391-021-00433-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis ISSN: 1365-7852 Impact factor: 5.455
Fig. 1Large-scale genomic sequencing analyses of mCRPC.
A List of three prospective genomic analyses of mCRPC samples. B Distribution of non-androgen-receptor, actionable genomic pathway alterations. C Distribution of commonly expressed and actionable genomic alterations. *Represent estimates based original article.
Fig. 2PROMISE consortium structure and workflow.
A Structure consisting of administrative headquarters, bio-informatics committee, executive committee, data committee, diversity & inclusion committee, and patient advocacy committee. Responsibilities of each committed listed. B Project workflow from data collection to release of data in abstract/manuscript form.
Examples of clinical and genomic data collected in the PROMISE consortium.
| Clinical data elements | Genomic data elements | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demographics | Disease characteristics | Lab values | Treatment characteristics | Pathology status | Gene information | Class of alteration |
| Age | Prior prostatectomy | PSA | ECOG PS | Specimen source | Type of sequencing test | Copy number variation |
| Race | Histology | Hemoglobin | Systemic therapies | Specimen date | Gene name | Structural variant (SV) |
| Veteran status | Gleason score | Platelets | Duration of Treatment | MSI | Somatic vs germline | Single nucleotide variant (SNV) |
| Marital status | Stage at diagnosis | ANC/ALC | Imaging obtained | MMR | Type of alteration | Insertion/Deletion |
| Smoking status | De novo metastasis | Alkaline phosphatase | Time to progression or death from diagnosis, metastatic disease, and CRPC | PD-L1 | Zygosity | Allele frequency (for cfDNA) |
Current Institutions Participating in the PROMISE Consortium.
| Institution name | Location |
|---|---|
| City of Hope | Duarte, CA |
| Duke Cancer Institute | Durham, NC |
| Emory University | Atlanta, GA |
| Henry Ford Health System | Detroit, MI |
| Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai | New York, NY |
| Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine | Baltimore, MD |
| Karmanos Cancer Center | Detroit, MI |
| Medical College of Wisconsin | Milwaukee, WI |
| Tulane University | New Orleans, LA |
| University of California San Diego | San Diego, CA |
| University of California San Francisco | San Francisco, CA |
| University of Iowa | Iowa City, IA |
| University of Michigan | Ann Arbor, MI |
| University of Oklahoma | Oklahoma City, OK |
| University of Washington | Seattle, WA |
| Weil Cornell Medical Center | New York, NY |
Fig. 3Project milestones and future timeline.
The PROMISE consortium was formed in March 2020. At the end of 2020, we collected clinical data of over 700 patients. We anticipate clinical data collection of 2000 patients by the end of 2021.