Abstract
Advances in genomics and proteomics have enabled more precise characterizations of tumors with the consequence that many cancers are being segregated into smaller categories. With this larger number of categories, more cancers are being categorized as rare. The downside to such categorizations is that the reduced numbers of patients in each category makes it difficult to gather enough information about each cancer. We are a group of patients and caregivers who have joined together to form a repository for patient-shared data and reports in an IRB-approved, non-profit medical registry for the rare and usually lethal childhood liver cancer, fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma (FLC). Since the Fibrolamellar Registry is patient-run and patient-owned, we have the trust of the patient community that the records will not be sold for profit. This has enabled us, in our first two years, to gather detailed medical records, scans and tests from over 140 patients. With input from scientists and clinicians who study FLC, we have written 600 questions of specific interest to this disease. Most of our patients have also opted to allow these medical records to be shared with a tissue FLC repository that already has samples from 110 patients. We have initiated two different collaborations with the clinical-research community to explore the records and our patients have been answering additional questions when pertinent to a particular study. Our ability to gather so many records for what is a rare cancer comes from our ability to involve patients from across institutions and across the globe. We are working with other patient groups and we feel that the Fibrolamellar Registry could be a model for gathering and organizing data for many rare diseases.
Citation Format: Michelle Desmond, Julie Latone, Siobhan Lett, Rachael D. Migler, Elana P. Simon, Sanford M. Simon. The fibrolamellar registry: A model for the study of rare diseases [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 3357.