Canary Prostate Active Surveillance Study: Design of a Multi-institutional Active Surveillance Cohort and Biorepository
Received 17 April 2009; accepted 29 May 2009. published online 16 September 2009.
Active surveillance is a management plan for localized prostate cancer that offers selective delayed intervention on indication of disease progression, allowing patients to delay or avoid treatment and associated side-effects. Outcomes from centers that promote active surveillance are favorable, with high rates of disease-specific survival. However, there remains a need for prognostic variables or biomarkers that distinguish with high specificity the aggressive cancers that progress on surveillance from the indolent cancers. The Canary Prostate Active Surveillance Study is a multicenter study and a biorepository that will discover and confirm biomarkers of aggressive disease as defined by histologic, prostate-specific antigen, or clinical criteria.
aDepartment of Urology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
bDepartment of Urology, Stanford University, Stanford, California
cDepartment of Urology, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, California
dDivision of Public Health Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington
eProstate Centre, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia
fDivision of Medical Oncology, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
gDivision of Human Biology, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington
hDepartment of Urology, University of Texas Health Sciences Center, San Antonio, Texas
Reprint requests: Daniel W. Lin, M.D., Department of Urology, Box 356510, 1959 NE Pacific St, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195
This work was supported by the Canary Foundation and Early Detection Research Network (EDRN) of the National Cancer Institute (NCI).