EUROCOURSE lessons learned from and for population-based cancer registries in Europe and their programme owners: Improving performance by research programming for public health and clinical evaluation |
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Affiliation: | 2. Dept. of Public Health, Erasmus University Medical Cancer Centre, PO Box 2040, 3000 CA Rotterdam, The Netherlands;3. Dept. of Registration and Research, Netherlands Comprehensive Cancer Organization, PO Box 19079, 3501 DB Utrecht, The Netherlands;4. Piedmont Cancer Registry – CPO, Centre for Cancer Prevention, Torino, Italy;5. National Cancer Registry, Building 6800, Cork Airport Business Park, Cork, Ireland;6. Dept. of Cancer Information, Danish Cancer Society (DCS), Copenhagen, Denmark;7. Cancer Genomics Lab, Fondazione Edo ed Elvo Tempia, Biella, Italy;8. Dept. of Clinical Epidemiology, Viecuri Medical Centre, PO Box 1926, 5900 BX Venlo, The Netherlands;9. Dept. of Clinical Psychology, Tilburg University, PO Box 90153, 5000 LB Tilburg, The Netherlands;10. Dept. of Health Technology and Services Research, MIRA Institute of Biomedical Science and Technical Medicine, University of Twente, PO Box 217, 7500 AE Enschede, The Netherlands;1. Eindhoven Cancer Registry & Erasmus University Medical Cancer Centre;2. National Cancer Registry;3. Piedmont Cancer Registry;1. Department of Surgical and Perioperative Sciences, Urology and Andrology, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden;2. Regional Cancer Centre, Uppsala University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden;3. Department of Urology, Ryhov Hospital, Jönköping, Sweden;4. Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden;1. Section of Cancer Information, International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), France;2. Piedmont Cancer Registry, CPO – Centre for Epidemiology and Prevention in Oncology in Piedmont, Turin, Italy;3. Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands;4. Comprehensive Cancer Centre South (IKZ), Eindhoven, The Netherlands;5. National Cancer Registry, Cork, Ireland;1. Croatian National Cancer Registry, Croatian National Institute of Public Health, Zagreb, Croatia;2. Comprehensive Cancer Centre South (IKZ), Eindhoven, The Netherlands;3. Slovenian Cancer Registry, Oncology Institute, Lubljana, Slovenia;4. Malta National Cancer Registry, Department of Health Information and Research, Pieta, Malta;5. Regional Cancer Registry of Cluj, Oncological Institute “Ion Chiricuta”, Cluj-Napoca, Romania;6. Cyprus Cancer Registry-Health Monitoring Unit, Ministry of Health, Nicosia, Cyprus;7. Bulgarian National Cancer Registry, National Oncology Hospital, Sofia, Bulgaria;8. Izmir Cancer Registry, Izmir, Turkey;9. Antalya Cancer Registry, Antalya, Turkey;10. Institute of Public Health Serbia, Belgrade, Serbia;11. Section of Cancer Information, International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France;12. Dept. of Public Health, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands;2. Department of Radiation Oncology, School of Medicine of the University of the Republic of Uruguay, Montevideo, Uruguay;3. Department of Radiation Oncology, Delfin Radioterapia Salvador, Bahía, Brazil;4. Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Neoplásicas (INEN), Lima Ica, Nazca, Peru;1. Finnish Cancer Registry, Institute for Statistical and Epidemiological Cancer Research, Pieni Roobertinkatu 9, FI-00130 Helsinki, Finland;2. Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland;1. Centro Nazionale di Epidemiologia, Sorveglianza e Promozione della Salute, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, viale Regina Elena 299, 00161 Rome, Italy;2. Department of Preventive and Predictive Medicine, Analytical Epidemiology and Health Impact Unit, Fondazione IRCCS, Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, via Venezian 1, 20133 Milan, Italy;3. Department of Preventive and Predictive Medicine, Evaluative epidemiology Unit, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, via Venezian 1, 20133 Milan, Italy;4. Servizio informatico, documentazione, biblioteca ed attività editoriali, Settore I – Informatica Istituto Superiore di Sanità, viale Regina Elena 299, 00161 Rome, Italy;5. Cancer Research UK Cancer Survival Group, Department of Non-Communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Keppel St., London WC1E 7HT, UK;6. Service de Biostatistique, Hospices Civils de Lyon, F-69003 Lyon, France;7. Université de Lyon, F-69000 Lyon, France;8. Université de Lyon 1, F-69100 Villeurbanne, France;9. CNRS, UMR5558, Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive, Equipe Biostatistique-Santé, F-69100 Villeurbanne, France;10. Registro Tumori Toscano, Istituto per lo studio e la prevenzione oncologica, Via Cosimo il Vecchio 2, 50141 Florence, Italy;11. Foundation National Institute for Cancer Epidemiology and Registration (NICER) c/o University of Zürich, Seilergraben 49, CH-8001 Zürich, Switzerland |
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Abstract: | Population-based cancer registries (CRs) in Europe have played a supportive, sometimes guiding, role in describing geographic variation of cancer epidemics and comparisons of oncological practice and preventive interventions since the 1950s for all types of cancer, separate and simultaneously. This paper deals with historical and longitudinal developments of the roughly 160 CRs and their programme owners (POs) that emerged since 1927 and accelerating since the late 70s especially in southern and continental Europe. About 40 million newly diagnosed patients were recorded since the 1950s out of a total of 100 million of whom almost 20 million are still alive and about 10% annually dying from cancer. The perception of unity in diversity and suboptimal comparability in performance and governance of CRs was confirmed in the EUROCOURSE (EUROpe against cancer: Optimisation of the Use of Registries for Scientific Excellence in research) European Research Area (ERA)-net coordination FP7 project of the European Commission (EU) which explored best practices, bottlenecks and future challenges of CRs. Regional oncologic and public health changes but also academic embedding of CRs varied considerably, although Anno 2012 optimal cancer surveillance indeed demanded intensive collaboration with professional and institutional stakeholders in two major areas (public health and clinical research) and five minor overlapping cancer research domains: aetiologic research, mass screening evaluation, quality of care, translational prognostics and survivorship. Each of these domains address specific study questions, mixes of disciplines, methodologies, additional data-sources and funding mechanisms. POs tended to become more and more public health institutes, Health ministries, but also comprehensive cancer centres and cancer societies through more and more funding at project or programme basis. POs were not easy to pin down because of their multiple, sometimes competitive (funding) obligations and increasing complexity of cancer surveillance. But they also rather seemed to need guiding principles for Governance of ‘their’ CR(s) as well as to appreciate value of collaborative research in Europe and shield CRs against unreasonable data protection in case of linkages. Despite access to specialised care related shortcomings, especially of survival cohort studies, European databases for studies of incidence and survival (such as ACCIS and EUREG on the one hand and EUROCARE and RARECARE on the other hand) have proved to be powerful means for comparative national or regional cancer surveillance. Pooling of comparable data will exhibit much instructive variation in time and place. If POs of CRs would consider multinational European studies of risk and prognosis of cancer more to serve their own regional or national interest, then progress in this field will accelerate and lead to more consistent funding from the EU. The current 20 million cancer survivors and their care providers are likely to appreciate more feedback.ConclusionMost CRs remain uniquely able to report on progress against cancer by studies of variation in incidence (in time and place), detection and survival, referral and treatment patterns and their (side) effects in unselected patients, the latter especially in the (very) elderly. Programming and profiling its multiple and diverse clinical and prevention research is likely to promote involvement of public health and clinical stakeholders with a population-based research interest, increasingly patient groups and licensed ‘buyers’ of oncologic services. |
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Keywords: | Cancer registry ERA-net Programme owner Linking databases Epidemiology Biobank Mass screening evaluation Data protection Quality of oncological care Survivorship |
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