CSER: Evaluating Utility and Improving Implementation of Genomic Sequencing for Pediatric Cancer Patients in the Diverse Population and Healthcare Settings of Texas: The KidsCanSeq Study
Through this Clinical Sequencing Evidence-Generating Research (CSER) with Enhanced Diversity project we are completing a clinical study (The Texas KidsCanSeq Study) comparing the results of targeted cancer panel sequencing versus genome-scale testing in pediatric cancer patients across diverse clinical settings. We will compare the targeted pediatric cancer panel to germline whole exome sequencing (WES) of unselected childhood cancer patients. We will also compare an RNA/DNA targeted pediatric cancer panel versus WES, transcriptome sequencing and copy number array of FFPE tumor samples for the subset of patients with high-risk tumors. Exome sequencing is performed from a blood or saliva sample of the pediatric age (0-18) patient. We are building on our success completing the CSER program BASIC3 exome sequencing trial (which included 60% Hispanic and African-American patients from a single large academic center) in this large multi-institutional study of an even more diverse patient population from six pediatric oncology healthcare settings across Texas. Data from the Texas KidsCanSeq study will be submitted through the CSER Data Coordinating Center for access in NIH-supported databases.
Consent Codes
GRUDiseases
CancerStudy Design
Case SetData Types
Targeted Cancer Panels (DNA and RNA), Whole Exome (Tumor and Germline)Subjects
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