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The children's brain tumor network (CBTN) - Accelerating research in pediatric central nervous system tumors through collaboration and open science.

Authors :
Lilly JV
Rokita JL
Mason JL
Patton T
Stefankiewiz S
Higgins D
Trooskin G
Larouci CA
Arya K
Appert E
Heath AP
Zhu Y
Brown MA
Zhang B
Farrow BK
Robins S
Morgan AM
Nguyen TQ
Frenkel E
Lehmann K
Drake E
Sullivan C
Plisiewicz A
Coleman N
Patterson L
Koptyra M
Helili Z
Van Kuren N
Young N
Kim MC
Friedman C
Lubneuski A
Blackden C
Williams M
Baubet V
Tauhid L
Galanaugh J
Boucher K
Ijaz H
Cole KA
Choudhari N
Santi M
Moulder RW
Waller J
Rife W
Diskin SJ
Mateos M
Parsons DW
Pollack IF
Goldman S
Leary S
Caporalini C
Buccoliero AM
Scagnet M
Haussler D
Hanson D
Firestein R
Cain J
Phillips JJ
Gupta N
Mueller S
Grant G
Monje-Deisseroth M
Partap S
Greenfield JP
Hashizume R
Smith A
Zhu S
Johnston JM
Fangusaro JR
Miller M
Wood MD
Gardner S
Carter CL
Prolo LM
Pisapia J
Pehlivan K
Franson A
Niazi T
Rubin J
Abdelbaki M
Ziegler DS
Lindsay HB
Stucklin AG
Gerber N
Vaske OM
Quinsey C
Rood BR
Nazarian J
Raabe E
Jackson EM
Stapleton S
Lober RM
Kram DE
Koschmann C
Storm PB
Lulla RR
Prados M
Resnick AC
Waanders AJ
Source :
Neoplasia (New York, N.Y.) [Neoplasia] 2023 Jan; Vol. 35, pp. 100846. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Nov 03.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Pediatric brain tumors are the leading cause of cancer-related death in children in the United States and contribute a disproportionate number of potential years of life lost compared to adult cancers. Moreover, survivors frequently suffer long-term side effects, including secondary cancers. The Children's Brain Tumor Network (CBTN) is a multi-institutional international clinical research consortium created to advance therapeutic development through the collection and rapid distribution of biospecimens and data via open-science research platforms for real-time access and use by the global research community. The CBTN's 32 member institutions utilize a shared regulatory governance architecture at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia to accelerate and maximize the use of biospecimens and data. As of August 2022, CBTN has enrolled over 4700 subjects, over 1500 parents, and collected over 65,000 biospecimen aliquots for research. Additionally, over 80 preclinical models have been developed from collected tumors. Multi-omic data for over 1000 tumors and germline material are currently available with data generation for > 5000 samples underway. To our knowledge, CBTN provides the largest open-access pediatric brain tumor multi-omic dataset annotated with longitudinal clinical and outcome data, imaging, associated biospecimens, child-parent genomic pedigrees, and in vivo and in vitro preclinical models. Empowered by NIH-supported platforms such as the Kids First Data Resource and the Childhood Cancer Data Initiative, the CBTN continues to expand the resources needed for scientists to accelerate translational impact for improved outcomes and quality of life for children with brain and spinal cord tumors.<br />Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. David S. Ziegler is a consultant, or on the advisory board, of Bayer, AstraZeneca, Accendatech, Novartis, Day One, FivePhusion, Amgen, Alexion, and Norgine. Angela J. Waanders is on the advisory board of Alexion and Day One.<br /> (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-5586
Volume :
35
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Neoplasia (New York, N.Y.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36335802
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neo.2022.100846