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The Role of Banked Human Tissue in Cancer Research

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Unification of 4 North American based pediatric clinical trials ... The BPC informatics system uses specialized codes to maintain patient confidentiality. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Role of Banked Human Tissue in Cancer Research


1
The Role of Banked Human Tissue in Cancer Research
  • Stephen J. Qualman M.D.
  • Childrens Hospital, Columbus, Ohio

2
Childrens Oncology Group
  • Unification of 4 North American based
    pediatric clinical trials groups
  • Childrens Cancer Group
  • Pediatric Oncology Group
  • National Wilms Tumor Study Group
  • Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study Group

3
COG Member Institutions, 2002
CCOPs/MBCCOPs
.
Members in Hawaii, Alaska, Australia, New
Zealand,Switzerland, Netherlands not displayed
4
Number of COG Institutions Submitting Specimens
242
236
225
219
210
186
143
43
7
5
Specimen Flow at the BPC
Investigators
Leukemia Biology Specimens
B I O P A T H O L O G Y
Procurement Lab
Wilms Biology Specimens
C E N T E R
Histology Lab
COG Solid Tumor Tissue Bank Biology Specimens
Submitting Institutions
COG Pathology Center Pathology Specimens
Reference Lab
STS Pathology/Biology Specimens
Repository
6
Number of COG Specimens Provided to Investigators
22067
21637
20857
14428
9320
7445
1402
698
609
7
Specimen Container
8
Two-day Temperature Curve of E-11C Dual Shipper
9
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10
Specimen Bar Coding
11
Specimen Transport
  • Procuring institutions ship specimens within
    24-hours of collection using the BPCs courier
    account number and dual-chamber kits in
    compliance with International Air Transport
    Association (IATC) Section 1.5.0.2 and Federal
    Regulations Section 172.7

12
Conforms with International Air Transport
Association (IATA) Section 1.5.0.2 CFR sec 172.7
13
Specimen Transport
  • A 1-800 number is available to institutions
    submitting specimens and investigators using
    tissue to facilitate communication.

14
The Biopathology Centers
  • The BPC provides banking and informatics services
    to
  • pediatric Cooperative Human Tissue Network
    (pCHTN)
  • Childrens Oncology Group (COG)
  • Gynecologic Oncology Group (GOG)
  • Childhood Cancer Survivor Study (CCSS)

15
The Biopathology Centers
  • In the last decade, the BPC has served nearly
    85,000 tumor or related tissue specimens linked
    to patient clinical outcome to over 300 different
    investigators.

16
The mission of the College, the principal
organization of board certified pathologists, is
to represent the interests of the patients, the
public and the pathologists by fostering
excellence in the practice of pathology and
laboratory medicine worldwide.
Time line for pediatric tumor protocol
development defining uniform pathology diagnosis
and procurement standards
7/1/01 Conception
11/2/01 - Wilms Tumor
2/8/02 - Rhabdomyosarcoma
7/12/02 - Neuroblastoma
11/8/02 - Ewing Sarcoma
17
Data Management
  • The majority of documents maintained by the BPC
    fall into three categories
  • Registration documents
  • Operative reports
  • Pathology reports
  • Copies of the associated pathology reports are
    sent along to researchers with submitted
    specimens, but are stripped of patient
    identifiers.

18
Informatics
  • Informatics can facilitate
  • Patient registration
  • Specimen tracking
  • Tissue cataloging
  • Quality assurance
  • Specimen availability
  • Tracking informed consent
  • Institutional compliance
  • Generation of tissue bank reports

19
Informatics
  • An ideal informatics system ensures data is
  • Available over a long period of time
  • Maintained in a standardized format
  • Able to be disseminated to others as needed
  • Collected from collaborative sources and combined

20
Intergroup Specimen Banking Committee
  • The Cooperative Group Chairs, along with the
    National Cancer Institute, recognized the need
    for common data elements across data systems. As
    a result, the Intergroup Specimen Banking
    Committee was formed in 1999

21
Intergroup Specimen Banking Committee
  • identify existing standard, policies and
    procedures, particularly those in common usage,
    which would address the needs of intergroup
    banking, rather than invent new ones. The goal
    was to deliver a set of recommendations that
    would require the least amount of work, change
    and expense to implement, while providing
    sufficient guidance to the research community to
    facilitate useful banking efforts in support of
    correlative science, to avoid unnecessary
    conflict and to ensure a sufficient standard of
    quality
  • Report of the Intergroup Specimen Banking
    Committee, 1999

22
Intergroup Specimen Banking Committee
  • Minimum data requirements for banking
  • All samples and sub-samples must have a unique
    identifier
  • The system must adhere to standard coding
    mechanism
  • The system must be able to maintain an
    up-to-date inventory by unique identifier
  • The database containing information on sample
    locations (inventory) may reside solely at the
    bank
  • Report of the Intergroup Specimen Banking
    Committee, 1999

23
Intergroup Specimen Banking Committee
  • The system must be able to
  • Flag (reserve) specimens for a particular study
  • Track the type of informed consent
  • Track specimens and allow for withdrawal of
    consent
  • Report and provide query results across groups
  • Provide quality control/checks on imported data
  • Report of the Intergroup Specimen Banking
    Committee, 1999

24
Informed Consent
  • By utilizing a three-item checkbox on an informed
    consent form, the patient may designate whether
    their tissue or case data may be used for
  • Cancer research
  • General medical research
  • Future patient contact for needed clinical
    follow-up

25
Data Linkage
  • Data records which can be directly or indirectly
    associated with a persons name or other
    identifying information are referred to as linked
    data.
  • The BPC informatics system uses specialized codes
    to maintain patient confidentiality. The BPC
    system must connect to the Cooperative Group
    Statistical Data Centers system via a virtual
    private network to link the clinical data to the
    specimen data.

26
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27
Virtual Private Networks
  • Streamline patient enrollment
  • Streamline specimen registration process
  • Synchronize information between physically
    different sites
  • Create virtual tissue banks from inventory of
    different sites

28
Virtual Private Networks
  • Primary requirements for implementation of a
    secure VPN
  • Authentication
  • Strong data encryption
  • Transaction privacy
  • Encryption key unique to each session
  • Scalability
  • Audit information
  • Immediate intrusion/attack detection

29
Metrics of Performance
  • A bank should be assessed by both deposits and
    withdrawals
  • A banking operation is defined by who is served
    and what is published.

30
  • The BPCs role is not just to serve the
    established investigator. Bank should have the
    flexibility to support new or entrepreneurial
    young investigators with exciting new scientific
    ideas.

31
Metrics of Performance
  • Assessments determined by
  • Feedback questionnaire process
  • Updated investigator biosketches
  • Project summaries
  • Current and submitted grant proposals
  • Publications from banked materials

32
Performance Findings
  • Nearly 80 of investigators using BPC tissue
    receive NIH support (either intramural or
    extramural)
  • Over 300 publications have resulted from
    research using BPC tissues in the past 10 years
  • 20 of papers appeared in journals considered to
    have a major impact

33
Number of Publications Produced Using Tissues
from the GOG Tissue Bank
34
Prediction of Central Nervous System Embryonal
Tumour Outcome Based on Gene Expression
Pomeroy SL, et al. Nature 45 436-442, 2002
35
Patients with Metastatic Alveolar Rhabdomyosarcoma
1.0
0.9
PAX7-FKHR
0.8
0.7
0.6
Proportion of patients
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
PAX3-FKHR
0.1
Log Rank Test p0.0015
0.0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Overall survival (years)
Sorensen PHB, et al. J Clin Oncol 2002 (in press)
36
Uses of Banked Tissue
MoAb, CGH FISH 8
Growth factors/ hormone receptors 8
36DNA Studies
24 Protein/enzyme
24RNA Studies
37
Questionnaire Results
38
Top 10 Difficulties
10. CHTN doesnt collect or ship pathogens
9. Laws prohibiting research using fetal tissue
8. Requests for entire organs
7. Requests for normal tissues (eg brain tissue)
6. Timing of tissue procurement
5. Tissue rarity
4. Tissue consent
3. If, and/or but requests
2. Tissue culture
39
1 Difficulty
Limitation on amount of tissue available
40
Specific Challenges
  • The ultimate role of the pathologist as a tumor
    banker in this setting is that of a tissue
    refiner and data miner.

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