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Avanzando Caminos (Leading Pathways): design and procedures of the Hispanic/Latino Cancer Survivorship Study.

Frank J PenedoPatricia I MorenoMagela PonsPaulo S PinheiroMichael H AntoniGilberto de Lima LopesCarmen J CalfaPatricia ChalelaLuz M GarciniChen-Pin WangYidong ChenAdolfo Enrique Diaz DuqueSteven W ColeAmelie G Ramirez
Published in: American journal of epidemiology (2024)
Avanzando Caminos (Leading Pathways): The Hispanic/Latino Cancer Survivorship Cohort Study aims to examine the influence of sociocultural, medical, stress-related, psychosocial, lifestyle, behavioral, and biological factors on symptom burden, health-related quality of life, and clinical outcomes among Hispanics/Latinos who have been previously treated for cancer. Avanzando Caminos is a prospective, cohort-based study of 3000 Hispanics/Latinos who completed primary cancer treatment within the past 5 years that is representative of the general Hispanic/Latino population in the United States. Participants will complete self-report measures at baseline (time [T] 1), 6 months (T2), 1 year (T3), 2 years (T4), 3 years (T5), 4 years (T6), and 5 years (T7). Blood samples drawn for assessment of leukocyte gene expression, cardiometabolic markers, and genetic admixture will be collected at baseline (T1), 1 year (T3), 3 years (T5), and 5 years (T7). Medical and cancer characteristics and clinical outcomes will be extracted from the electronic medical record and/or state cancer registry at each time point. Data analysis will include general latent variable modeling and latent growth modeling. Avanzando Caminos will fill critical gaps in knowledge in order to guide future secondary and tertiary prevention efforts to mitigate cancer disparities and optimize health-related quality of life among Hispanic/Latino cancer survivors.
Keyphrases
  • papillary thyroid
  • gene expression
  • squamous cell
  • african american
  • childhood cancer
  • healthcare
  • data analysis
  • type diabetes
  • mental health
  • cross sectional
  • quality improvement
  • drug induced