The Pathways Study is a prospective cohort study of women diagnosed with first primary invasive breast cancers in the Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) medical care system. Enrolled from January, 2006 through May, 2013, the 4,505 women in the cohort are diverse racially and ethnically, and include 358 (8.0%) African American, 557 (12.4%) Latina, and 578 (12.8%) Asian women. Data have been collected on food intake, physical activity, use of nutritional supplements and complementary and alternative modalities (CAM), and patient-reported factors such as quality of life, social support, and doctor-patient communications. Biospecimens collected from almost all cohort members and banked in the study biorepository at Roswell Park Cancer Institute (RPCI) include blood (n=4,034, or 90% of the cohort), saliva (n=4,310, or 96%), and extracted germline DNA (n=4,437, or 99%). Baseline addresses have been geocoded and linked to contextual databases to create neighborhood-level social and built environment variables. The KPNC setting provides access to electronic medical records (EMRs), with data available on diagnostic characteristics, treatment such as specific chemotherapy agents and doses, hormone therapy, high-grade toxicities, and comorbid conditions. As of December 31, 2014, 369 recurrences, 213 second primary invasive cancers, and 469 deaths have been identified in this cohort, with 751 women with at least one of these outcomes. In this infrastructure grant, we propose to maintain and augment the Pathways Study to support a growing research program that builds upon this resource. Study participants will continue to be followed for occurrence of outcomes through KP medical records and annual follow-up questionnaires. Follow-up for updated quality-of-life and other patient-reported measures such as changes in lifestyle factors will continue through 96 months post-enrollment for those who have not yet passed that milestone. We will augment biospecimen resources with a follow-up blood sample for examination of long-term molecular factors, establishing a tumor specimen bank from all cohort members, and by immunohistochemistry assays to subtype tumors. We will enhance data resources with ongoing linkage with databases from KP electronic medical records; by incorporating genotypic data to be obtained from the Center for Inherited Disease Research (separate grant received an Impact Score of 23); and by updating contextual data for the cohort. We will establish an external advisory board and a community and participant advisory board to help guide infrastructure activities and prioritize research use of this cohort. We will also establish a consortium of breas cancer prognosis epidemiology cohort studies to enhance the ability to examine associations in subgroups of breast cancers. Ongoing support will enhance the unique and outstanding resource that is the Pathways Study, and facilitate its availability for the broader research community.

Public Health Relevance

The Pathways Study is a prospective cohort study of 4,505 women diagnosed with invasive breast cancer in Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC), with data on lifestyle and psychosocial factors, blood samples and extracted DNA, and linkage to KPNC medical records and neighborhood social and built environment databases. In this infrastructure application, we plan to enhance the Pathways Study resource by continuing to follow study participants and documenting outcomes; enhancing biospecimen resources with a follow-up blood sample and tumor biobank; and by adding new data from KPNC medical records, genome-wide assays, and neighborhood characteristics. These activities will make the Pathways Study an outstanding and unique resource for research on breast cancer survivorship and prognosis.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
1U01CA195565-01A1
Application #
9044480
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1-SRB-J (O2))
Program Officer
Elena, Joanne W
Project Start
2016-06-01
Project End
2021-05-31
Budget Start
2016-06-01
Budget End
2017-05-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
$1,975,323
Indirect Cost
$424,807
Name
Kaiser Foundation Research Institute
Department
Type
DUNS #
150829349
City
Oakland
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94612
Kroenke, Candyce H; Hershman, Dawn L; Gomez, Scarlett L et al. (2018) Personal and clinical social support and adherence to adjuvant endocrine therapy among hormone receptor-positive breast cancer patients in an integrated health care system. Breast Cancer Res Treat 170:623-631
Madsen, Michael J; Knight, Stacey; Sweeney, Carol et al. (2018) Reparameterization of PAM50 Expression Identifies Novel Breast Tumor Dimensions and Leads to Discovery of a Genome-Wide Significant Breast Cancer Locus at 12q15. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 27:644-652
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Shariff-Marco, Salma; Von Behren, Julie; Reynolds, Peggy et al. (2017) Impact of Social and Built Environment Factors on Body Size among Breast Cancer Survivors: The Pathways Study. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 26:505-515
Greenlee, Heather; Hershman, Dawn L; Shi, Zaixing et al. (2017) BMI, Lifestyle Factors and Taxane-Induced Neuropathy in Breast Cancer Patients: The Pathways Study. J Natl Cancer Inst 109:
Kwan, Marilyn L; Roh, Janise M; Laurent, Cecile A et al. (2017) Patterns and reasons for switching classes of hormonal therapy among women with early-stage breast cancer. Cancer Causes Control 28:557-562
Engmann, Natalie J; Ergas, Isaac J; Yao, Song et al. (2017) Genetic Ancestry Is not Associated with Breast Cancer Recurrence or Survival in U.S. Latina Women Enrolled in the Kaiser Permanente Pathways Study. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 26:1466-1469
Cespedes Feliciano, Elizabeth M; Kwan, Marilyn L; Kushi, Lawrence H et al. (2017) Body mass index, PAM50 subtype, recurrence, and survival among patients with nonmetastatic breast cancer. Cancer 123:2535-2542
Cespedes Feliciano, Elizabeth M; Kwan, Marilyn L; Kushi, Lawrence H et al. (2017) Adiposity, post-diagnosis weight change, and risk of cardiovascular events among early-stage breast cancer survivors. Breast Cancer Res Treat 162:549-557
Yao, Song; Zhang, Yali; Tang, Li et al. (2017) Bone remodeling and regulating biomarkers in women at the time of breast cancer diagnosis. Breast Cancer Res Treat 161:501-513

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