Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The overarching aim of this nationwide Swedish cohort study is to reduce death and suffering from oesophageal and gastric tumours. This aim can be accomplished by a broad research approach that aims to identify:
Full description
Swedish OEsophageal and GAstric tumour Study (SOEGAS)
Background Globally, oesophageal and gastric tumours are common with a high mortality. Oesophageal cancer and gastric cancer combined are often labelled upper gastrointestinal (GI) cancer. These tumours share many characteristics, including anatomy, risk factors, treatment and prognosis.
The main known risk factors for adenocarcinoma of the oesophagus and gastro-oesophageal junction are gastro-oesophageal reflux disease and obesity. The main risk factors for the other main histological type of oesophageal cancer, squamous cell carcinoma, are tobacco smoking and alcohol. The strongest known risk factor for gastric cancer is infection with Helicobacter pylori. Shared risk factors include dietary factors, tobacco smoking and heredity.
The curative treatment of upper GI cancers builds heavily on demanding surgery, where most of the oesophagus or stomach is resected. Except for surgery, most tumours are also treated with pre-operative, and sometimes postoperative, chemotherapy or chemoradiotherapy (6). The palliative treatment is also very important since the majority of patients are not eligible for curative treatment.
The survival is poor in patients diagnosed with upper GI cancer. This is mainly explained by late diagnosis since the symptoms are usually late and aggressive tumour biology, with early spread and recurrence. If detected early, the prognosis is excellent, but only a fraction of patients is detected at early tumour stages. The overall 5-year survival in oesophageal cancer is less than 20% and in gastric cancer it is less than 30% in most populations, including Sweden. The rate of patients found eligible for curative treatment including surgery is only 20-35%. Among operated patients the postoperative 5-year survival is 30-50%. It is crucial to conduct research that can improve the lives also of palliative patients.
It is of great importance to identify factors that can prevent upper GI cancer. Means to facilitate the detection at a premalignant or early and curable tumour stage would improve the prognosis and survivorship. It is also highly relevant to identify factors that can improve the curative and palliative treatment.
Resources Opportunities Sweden offers internationally unique possibilities to link high quality registry data with clinical data from medical records, which make up a fantastic resource for valid research in aetiology, prevention, detection, and treatment of upper GI cancer. The personal identity numbers assigned to all Swedish residents enables individual data to be linked.
Experience Our research group has a long track record in addressing risk factors, preventive measures and treatment of upper GI cancer. The research group contains expertise in clinics, epidemiology and biostatistics.
Overarching aims
The overarching aim of this research project is to reduce death and suffering from upper GI cancer. This aim can be accomplished by a broad research approach that aims to identify:
Specific aims
Evaluate the recent incidence trends
These analyses will separately assess differences in incidence over time across various patient and tumour characteristics, including:
Identify risk factors
Identify factors that facilitate early detection
Evaluate trends in prognosis Treatment Curative Surgery Neo-adjuvant therapy
Palliative
Patient characteristics Sex Age BMI Socio-economic factors
Tumour characteristics Stage Histology Site within the oesophagus or stomach
Identify factors that can improve prognosis and survivorship
Methods Study cohort The cohort is entitled the Swedish OEsophageal and GAstric tumour Study (acronym SOEGAS), and will include patients diagnosed with oesophageal or gastric tumour from year 2000 onwards. The selection of the cohort will be based on a diagnosis code representing oesophageal or gastric tumours recorded in: Swedish Cancer Registry, Swedish Patient Registry or Cause of Death Registry.
Data collection
This cohort needs to be linked with additional data for us to be able to evaluate the specific research aims listed above. The resources and data are needed for all cohort members:
Personal identity numbers and key codes We need the personal identity numbers of the selected cohort members to retrieve the medical records from the healthcare services. We also need the National Board of Health and Welfare ('Socialstyrelsen') to keep the key codes to all cohort members in order for us to ask for up-dates of the cohort regarding potential needs for additional time, follow-up, cohort size and further data.
Statistical analysis The statistical analysis will be done by one of our senior biostatisticians employed in the group. All data management and analyses will be done according to laws and regulations. There will be various statistical methods used and these need to be tailored for each individual study based on the cohort. However, studies evaluating risk factors will typically be analysed using multivariable logistic regression, providing odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals adjusted for potential confounding factors. Studies evaluating mortality as the outcome will be analysed using multivariable Cox regression, providing hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals adjusted for potential confounding factors.
Statistical power The cohort will be powerful enough to study the main research questions. We cannot expand the study further while maintaining its high internal validity. It is already nationwide complete and the study period from 2000 onwards mirrors a modern era of treatment. Thus, we cannot increase the sample size.
Specific study protocols The study protocol for each study included in this project will be specified with detailed study protocols before initiated. This project plan does not allow detailed presentation of all future studies based on the data collection, but it gives an overview of the topic.
Significance
SOEGAS has all prerequisites to contribute substantially with new knowledge that might reduce deaths and suffering in oesophageal and gastric tumours on a global scale. All of the studies included in the project will be based on Swedish data and we have good reasons to believe that outputs from the project will have a global influence as well. The quality and the contents of the Swedish registries might have changed over calendar periods but from 2000 onwards only limited changes have been made, which improves the quality of the research and facilitates interpretations and reduces various sources of bias. Taken together, SOEGAS might bring extremely valuable information to an area of research which is clearly understudied which is the aetiology, prevention and treatment of tumours of the oesophagus and stomach.
Enrollment
Sex
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Surgery for oesophageal or gastric cancer -
Exclusion Criteria: None
25,000 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Jesper Lagergren, MD PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal