The current standard of care for detecting and treating cervical cancer and precancer involves the use of Papanicolaou smears, and if this is positive it is followed by colposcopically directed biopsy, with treatment if the biopsy is positive. Several highly trained medical personnel are required for this sequence of procedures and the patient may need to make as many as three visits to various clinics. Furthermore, the results of Papanicolaou smears and biopsies are based on subjective evaluation by human pathologists. This approach to detecting and treating cervical cancer and pre-cancer is not feasible for the developing world where there is a shortage of pathologists and infrastructure. We are investigating devices based on optical technologies that could save many lives in the developing world, and could provide more cost-effective and accurate methods for screening and diagnosis of cervical neoplasia in the developed world. Several technologies are proposed for investigation in this Program Project, including point probes for fluorescence and reflectance spectroscopy (which have already been built and tested), quantitative pathology including cytopathology (examination of cells from a Papanicolaou smear) and histopathology (examination of tissue slices from a biopsy), the Multispectral Digital Colposcope (MDC;a device for imaging the cervix in a small number of reflectance and fluorescence bandwidths), a combined point-probe/MDC, an in vivo confocal microscope, a low-cost, battery powered device for use in low-resource settings (the DIA, or Diagnostic Imgaing Aid), and contrast agents to aid visualization. The Biostatistics and Data Management Core interacts with and is vital to all other Cores and Projects. The technologies that are at the heart of this proposal produce large quantifies of data in addition to more standard types of data on patients such as biographical data (e.g. age, number of children, etc.) and medical data (e.g., results from pathology readings). Numerous challenges are presented by the collection, processing, quality assurance, maintenance, and analysis of these data. The Core maintains the database in which all research data obtained under the grant is stored. The management of this database includes ensuring data security and integrity and preserving patient privacy.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
7P01CA082710-13
Application #
8706061
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1-RPRB-7)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2014-08-01
Budget End
2015-07-31
Support Year
13
Fiscal Year
2014
Total Cost
$549,007
Indirect Cost
$14,656
Name
Brookdale University Hospital & Medical Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
063864656
City
Brooklyn
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
11212
Montealegre, J R; Peckham-Gregory, E C; Marquez-Do, D et al. (2018) Racial/ethnic differences in HPV 16/18 genotypes and integration status among women with a history of cytological abnormalities. Gynecol Oncol 148:357-362
Zhu, Hongxiao; Morris, Jeffrey S; Wei, Fengrong et al. (2017) Multivariate functional response regression, with application to fluorescence spectroscopy in a cervical pre-cancer study. Comput Stat Data Anal 111:88-101
Yang, Jingjing; Cox, Dennis D; Lee, Jong Soo et al. (2017) Efficient Bayesian hierarchical functional data analysis with basis function approximations using Gaussian-Wishart processes. Biometrics 73:1082-1091
Montealegre, Jane R; Varier, Indu; Bracamontes, Christina G et al. (2017) Racial/ethnic variation in the prevalence of vaccine-related human papillomavirus genotypes. Ethn Health :1-12
Nghiem, Van T; Davies, Kalatu R; Beck, J Robert et al. (2016) Overtreatment and Cost-Effectiveness of the See-and-Treat Strategy for Managing Cervical Precancer. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 25:807-14
Nghiem, Van T; Davies, Kalatu R; Chan, Wenyaw et al. (2016) Disparities in cervical cancer survival among Asian-American women. Ann Epidemiol 26:28-35
Bodenschatz, Nico; Lam, Sylvia; Carraro, Anita et al. (2016) Diffuse optical microscopy for quantification of depth-dependent epithelial backscattering in the cervix. J Biomed Opt 21:66001
Sheikhzadeh, Fahime; Ward, Rabab K; Carraro, Anita et al. (2015) Quantification of confocal fluorescence microscopy for the detection of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. Biomed Eng Online 14:96
Yamal, Jose-Miguel; Guillaud, Martial; Atkinson, E Neely et al. (2015) Prediction using hierarchical data: Applications for automated detection of cervical cancer. Stat Anal Data Min 8:65-74
Montealegre, Jane R; Landgren, Rachel M; Anderson, Matthew L et al. (2015) Acceptability of self-sample human papillomavirus testing among medically underserved women visiting the emergency department. Gynecol Oncol 138:317-22

Showing the most recent 10 out of 110 publications