RESUMEN
PURPOSE: An important obstacle to cancer research is that nearly all academic cancer centers maintain substantial collections of highly duplicative, poorly quality-assured, nonintercommunicating, difficult-to-access data repositories. It is inherently clear that this state of affairs increases costs and reduces quality and productivity of both research and nonresearch activities. We hypothesized that designing and implementing a multipurpose cancer information system on the basis of the Biomedical Research Integrated Domain (BRIDG) model developed by the National Cancer Institute and its collaborators might lessen the duplication of effort inherent in capturing, quality-assuring, and accessing data located in multiple single-purpose systems, and thereby increases productivity while reducing costs. METHODS: We designed and implemented a core data structure on the basis of the BRIDG model and incorporated multiple entities, attributes, and functionalities to support the multipurpose functionality of the system. We used the resultant model as a foundation upon which to design and implement modules for importing preexisting data, capturing data prospectively, quality-assuring data, exporting data to analytic files, and analyzing the quality-assured data to support multiple functionalities simultaneously. To our knowledge, our system, which we refer to as the Cancer Informatics Data System, is the first multipurpose, BRIDG-harmonized cancer research information system implemented at an academic cancer center. RESULTS: We describe the BRIDG-harmonized system that simultaneously supports patient care, teaching, research, clinical decision making, administrative decision making, mandated volume-and-outcomes reporting, clinical quality assurance, data quality assurance, and many other functionalities. CONCLUSION: Implementation of a highly quality-assured, multipurpose cancer information system on the basis of the BRIDG model at an academic center is feasible and can increase access to accurate data to support research integrity and productivity as well as nonresearch activities.
Asunto(s)
Investigación Biomédica , Trasplante de Células Madre Hematopoyéticas , Humanos , Sistemas de Información , National Cancer Institute (U.S.) , Estados UnidosRESUMEN
B-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma (B-LBL) is a malignant neoplasm of immature B cells that accounts for only 10% of all cases of lymphoblastic lymphoma. Most commonly, B-LBL presents as bony lesions, but in rare cases, the disease manifests cutaneously. We present a case of simultaneous cutaneous and systemic presentation of B-LBL in an otherwise healthy 28-year-old man in which the lymphoblastic infiltrate stained positive for CD79a, Tdt, CD10, and CD20. A diagnosis of cutaneous B-LBL was made, and systemic work-up revealed widespread involvement of the skin, bone, and lymph nodes. Review of all currently described cases of cutaneous B-LBL with or without systemic involvement revealed that the most frequently positive tumor markers were CD79a (92.3%), Tdt (90.6%), and CD10 (83.3%). Systemic involvement of B-LBL was found in nearly half of all cases with cutaneous presentation.