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Global Cardio Oncology Registry (G-COR): Registry Design, Primary Objectives, and Future Perspectives of a Multicenter Global Initiative.
- Teske, Arco J;
- Moudgil, Rohit;
- López-Fernández, Teresa;
- Barac, Ana;
- Brown, Sherry Ann;
- Deswal, Anita;
- Neilan, Tomas G;
- Ganatra, Sarju;
- Abdel Qadir, Husam;
- Menon, Venu;
- Sverdlov, Aaron L;
- Cheng, Richard K;
- Makhoul, Silvia;
- Ghosh, Arjun K;
- Szmit, Sebastian;
- Zaha, Vlad;
- Addison, Daniel;
- Zhang, Lili;
- Herrmann, Joerg;
- Chong, Jun H;
- Agarwala, Vivek;
- Iakobishvili, Zaza;
- Guerrero, Patricia;
- Yang, Eric H;
- Leja, Monika;
- Akhter, Nausheen;
- Guha, Avirup;
- Okwuosa, Tochukwu M;
- Silva, Carolina Carvalho;
- Collier, Patrick;
- DeCara, Jeanne;
- Bauer, Brenton;
- Lenneman, Carrie E;
- Sadler, Diego
- et al.
Abstract
Global collaboration in cardio-oncology is needed to understand the prevalence of cancer therapy-related cardiovascular toxicity in different risk groups, practice settings, and geographic locations. There are limited data on the socioeconomic and racial/ethnic disparities that may impact access to care and outcomes. To address these gaps, we established the Global Cardio-Oncology Registry, a multinational, multicenter prospective registry.
We assembled cardiologists and oncologists from academic and community settings to collaborate in the first Global Cardio-Oncology Registry. Subsequently, a survey for site resources, demographics, and intention to participate was conducted. We designed an online data platform to facilitate this global initiative.
A total of 119 sites responded to an online questionnaire on their practices and main goals of the registry: 49 US sites from 23 states and 70 international sites from 5 continents indicated a willingness to participate in the Global Cardio-Oncology Registry. Sites were more commonly led by cardiologists (85/119; 72%) and were more often university/teaching (81/119; 68%) than community based (38/119; 32%). The average number of cardio-oncology patients treated per month was 80 per site. The top 3 Global Cardio-Oncology Registry priorities in cardio-oncology care were breast cancer, hematologic malignancies, and patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors. Executive and scientific committees and specific committees were established. A pilot phase for breast cancer using Research Electronic Data Capture Cloud platform recently started patient enrollment.
We present the structure for a global collaboration. Information derived from the Global Cardio-Oncology Registry will help understand the risk factors impacting cancer therapy-related cardiovascular toxicity in different geographic locations and therefore contribute to reduce access gaps in cardio-oncology care. Risk calculators will be prospectively derived and validated.
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