Southern Community Cohort Study
William J. Blot, Ph.D.
Vanderbilt University and International Epidemiology Institute, Ltd.
Nashville, Tenn., and Rockville, Md.
Funded since 2001
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The current body of knowledge regarding the etiology and prevention of
cancer draws substantially from prospective epidemiologic studies, among
which African Americans have been greatly underrepresented. Meanwhile,
African Americans experience a disproportionate incidence of and/or mortality
from many major cancers and other chronic diseases for reasons that remain
unknown.
Our objective is to initiate a long-term prospective cohort study comprised
of approximately 100,000 residents age 40 to 79, over two-thirds African
American, of southeastern U.S. states. Comprehensive baseline information
will be collected about dietary, lifestyle, medical, occupational, and
other factors, and a large biospecimen repository will be established
that can be used to test future hypotheses involving individual susceptibility
to environmental carcinogens.
Over half of the cohort members are being recruited from southern community
health centers, providing health services to primarily low-income residents
without health insurance. Here participants are being offered an in-person
assisted interview using a structured questionnaire and the collection
of blood or buccal cell specimens in a practical and convenient setting.
The remainder will be recruited from the general populations, identified
from drivers license, voter registration, and other sources. The cohort
will then be followed actively via periodic repeat contact and passively
via linkage with state mortality and cancer registries and the National
Death Index.
The cohort was designed to be large enough to begin analyses of specific
risk factors for common cancers (prostate, lung, breast, colorectal) within
a few years of enrollment completion. Furthermore, the large study size
will enable the assessment of less common cancers afflicting blacks more
than other racial groups shortly thereafter, and the biospecimen repository
will provide an invaluable resource for the evaluation of biomarkers of
cancer risk.
Cohort recruitment is now underway at nearly 20 community health centers.
Over 16,000 persons have enrolled by mid-2003, with 93% providing biologic
specimens for future assay. The study should help answer questions regarding
the etiology of certain cancers, elucidate causes of the disparities in
cancer incidence and mortality across racial groups, and lead to the development
of measures aimed at the prevention of cancer and other diseases, especially
among African Americans.
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