The vision of the "Lynch syndrome INtegrative Epidemiology And GEnetics" (LINEAGE) Consortium is to collaboratively improve the lives and longevity of individuals and families with Lynch syndrome. The mission of the LINEAGE Consortium is to collaboratively improve Lynch syndrome care through high-quality research. This consortium will provide intellectual and infrastructure support to facilitate development of research questions, collection of standardized data and biospecimens, support of grant applications, and generation of collaborative manuscripts. Our aims are to: I. Establish a prospective cohort of individuals with Lynch syndrome II. Collect standardized longitudinal clinical and biosample data to elucidate Lynch Syndrome epidemiology and gene-host interactions III. Promote intervention trials to improve cancer prevention and early detection in Lynch Syndrome
The main objective of this consortium is to build a shared resource to drive research in critical areas necessary to understand LS-related neoplasia risk and improve early detection and prevention of LS-associated cancers. This consortium will provide intellectual and infrastructure support to facilitate development of research questions, collection of standardized clinical data and biospecimens, support grant applications, and generate collaborative manuscripts. Data and samples collected for LINEAGE will allow the consortium to address a variety of topic areas including but not limited to: I. Risk of prevalent and incident colorectal neoplasia among PV/LPV carriers. II. Estimate risk of prevalent and incident extra-colonic neoplasm among PV/LPV carriers. III. Characterization of post-colonoscopy colorectal cancer among PV/LPV carriers. IV. Risk factors for prevalent and incident neoplasia. The LINEAGE Consortium is an observational prospective cohort study, with baseline and annual electronic health record (EHR) abstraction, and electronic participant and provider surveys. The consortium may also collect single or serial biosamples from identified and enrolled LS patients at participating centers.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
5,000
University of Colorado
Aurora, Colorado, United States
RECRUITINGUniversity of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGColorectal cancer incidence
cases of adenocarcinoma of the colon or rectum diagnosed over the observation period
Time frame: 40 years
non-colorectal cancer incidence
new cases of any cancer diagnosed over observation period
Time frame: 40 years
precancerous colorectal polyps
new diagnoses of any of the following polyps in the colon or rectum * tubular adenoma * villous adenoma * tubulovillous adenoma * sessile serrated lesion * traditional serrated adenoma
Time frame: 40 years
Sonia Kupfer, MD
CONTACT
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