An Overview of Cancer in the First 315,000 All of Us Participants
- PMID: 36048778
- PMCID: PMC9436122
- DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0272522
An Overview of Cancer in the First 315,000 All of Us Participants
Abstract
Introduction: The NIH All of Us Research Program will have the scale and scope to enable research for a wide range of diseases, including cancer. The program's focus on diversity and inclusion promises a better understanding of the unequal burden of cancer. Preliminary cancer ascertainment in the All of Us cohort from two data sources (self-reported versus electronic health records (EHR)) is considered.
Materials and methods: This work was performed on data collected from the All of Us Research Program's 315,297 enrolled participants to date using the Researcher Workbench, where approved researchers can access and analyze All of Us data on cancer and other diseases. Cancer case ascertainment was performed using data from EHR and self-reported surveys across key factors. Distribution of cancer types and concordance of data sources by cancer site and demographics is analyzed.
Results and discussion: Data collected from 315,297 participants resulted in 13,298 cancer cases detected in the survey (in 89,261 participants), 23,520 cancer cases detected in the EHR (in 203,813 participants), and 7,123 cancer cases detected across both sources (in 62,497 participants). Key differences in survey completion by race/ethnicity impacted the makeup of cohorts when compared to cancer in the EHR and national NCI SEER data.
Conclusions: This study provides key insight into cancer detection in the All of Us Research Program and points to the existing strengths and limitations of All of Us as a platform for cancer research now and in the future.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
References
-
- Pickens CM, Pierannunzi C, Garvin W, Town M. Surveillance for Certain Health Behaviors and Conditions Among States and Selected Local Areas—Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, United States, 2015. MMWR Surveill Summ. 2018;67(9):1–90. Epub 20180629. doi: 10.15585/mmwr.ss6709a1 ; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC6023179. - DOI - PMC - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
- OT2 OD026556/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- U2C OD023196/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD025315/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD026551/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- U24 OD023121/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD026552/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD026549/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD025337/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- UL1 TR001422/TR/NCATS NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD025277/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD026555/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD026550/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD026553/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD023205/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD023132/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD025276/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD026557/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD026554/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- U24 OD023163/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD023206/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- U24 OD023176/OD/NIH HHS/United States
- OT2 OD026548/OD/NIH HHS/United States
