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The COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19)

$595,000P30FY2020CANIH

Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville TN

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT07016399Trial NCT06593106Trial NCT05501665Trial NCT05361720Trial NCT04765072Trial NCT02702310Trial NCT02685631Trial NCT02677883Trial NCT02676752Trial NCT02672475Trial NCT02658487Trial NCT02600533Trial NCT02489422Trial NCT02480114Trial NCT02457910Trial NCT02448225Trial NCT02440737Trial NCT02374931Trial NCT02359851Trial NCT02324881Trial NCT02296112Trial NCT02269111Trial NCT02240381Trial NCT02236546Trial NCT02170272Trial NCT02151539Trial NCT02148406Trial NCT01996527Trial NCT01928160Trial NCT01901367Trial NCT01660971Trial NCT01230515Trial NCT01198535Trial NCT01141218Trial NCT01098669Trial NCT01098643Trial NCT01096407Trial NCT01096394Trial NCT01096381Trial NCT01077440Trial NCT01031446Trial NCT01013506Trial NCT01009931Trial NCT01007422Trial NCT00993694Trial NCT00993135Trial NCT00987766Trial NCT00984542Trial NCT00984490Trial NCT00983268Trial NCT00957736Trial NCT00949052Trial NCT00930930Trial NCT00900406Trial NCT00900003Trial NCT00899769Trial NCT00899626Trial NCT00899457Trial NCT00899301Trial NCT00899028Trial NCT00898742Trial NCT00898638Trial NCT00898430Trial NCT00898313Trial NCT00897988Trial NCT00897832Trial NCT00897793Trial NCT00897650Trial NCT00897468Trial NCT00897403Trial NCT00897117Trial NCT00896948Trial NCT00896675Trial NCT00892801Trial NCT00875238Trial NCT00840814Trial NCT00837876Trial NCT00835679Trial NCT00801346Trial NCT00765245Trial NCT00755040Trial NCT00675636Trial NCT00670644Trial NCT00670605Trial NCT00670046Trial NCT00666211Trial NCT00656604Trial NCT00653250Trial NCT00651976Trial NCT00651716Trial NCT00647218Trial NCT00626873Trial NCT00625417Trial NCT00625066Trial NCT00616590Trial NCT00601991Trial NCT00573404Trial NCT00550537Trial NCT00544648Trial NCT00533884

Abstract

COVID-19, the disease caused by the SARS-coV-2 virus, has now affected at least 1,200,000 people globally, and cases are accumulating in an exponential fashion in many countries, including the United States. Cancer patients have a unique risk profile in this pandemic. Many patients, especially those actively on treatment, have high levels of contact with the health care system. This can include provider visits, phlebotomy, imaging, social work and financial consultations, and infusion room visits for anti-cancer therapy and supportive care such as blood transfusions. Despite heroic efforts to reduce viral transmission in these shared spaces, patients are at an increased risk for COVID-19 exposure. Additionally, most cancer patients are immunocompromised through the marrow toxic effects of anti-cancer drugs, supportive medications such as steroids, and/or the cancer itself; and over 60 years of age, putting them in the highest-risk category for COVID-19-related morbidity and mortality. Finally, incidences of important comorbidities can be considerably elevated in several cancers, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in lung cancer or inflammatory bowel disease in colorectal cancer, further exacerbating our patients? vulnerability to this novel pathogen. Early reports on prognosis for cancer patients are conflicting and, for the most part, non-peer-reviewed. The largest study published to date includes 18 patients with cancer, who were shown to have increased risk for severe events in multivariate analysis. Lung cancer was the most common malignancy in this cohort, comprising 5 of the 18 cases (28%). Importantly, only five of the 18 patients were known to be on active systemic anti-cancer therapy. Still, these small patient numbers do not reflect the true impact of COVID-19 on cancer patients, particularly patients on active treatment. Given this acute lack of knowledge and concern for extreme vulnerability, the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium was formed to understand how the novel virus affects cancer patients. While this national effort began organically, primarily through social media, membership has quickly grown to over 130 physicians and nurses representing over 60 institutions and organizations in the US. Included in this membership, thus far, are 35 NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers, as well as 6 NCI-designated Cancer Centers and large networks of community practices. The driving goal of the consortium is to collect prospective, granular, uniformly organized information to help generate hypotheses for translational science, and to arm treating providers with the most complete data resource as rapidly as possible on cancer patients infected with COVID-19. As the Coordinating Center for the consortium, we will establish and propagate best practices for governance, data collection, and data dissemination. We will host the main data registry and will work with participant institutions setting up mirrored local databases. We will also pilot a prospective biospecimen collection protocol focused on determining whether clonal hematopoiesis in cancer patients with COVID-19 alters their risk profile.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →