Litcius/Paper detail

College of American Pathologists Cancer Protocols: From Optimizing Cancer Patient Care to Facilitating Interoperable Reporting and Downstream Data Use

Vanda F. Torous, Ross W. Simpson, Jyoti Balani, Alexander S. Baras, Michael A. Berman, George Birdsong, Giovanna A. Giannico, Gladell P. Paner, Jason R. Pettus, Zack Sessions, S. Joseph Sirintrapun, John R. Srigley, Samantha Spencer

2021JCO Clinical Cancer Informatics35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The College of American Pathologists Cancer Protocols have offered guidance to pathologists for standard cancer pathology reporting for more than 35 years. The adoption of computer readable versions of these protocols by electronic health record and laboratory information system (LIS) vendors has provided a mechanism for pathologists to report within their LIS workflow, in addition to enabling standardized structured data capture and reporting to downstream consumers of these data such as the cancer surveillance community. This paper reviews the history of the Cancer Protocols and electronic Cancer Checklists, outlines the current use of these critically important cancer case reporting tools, and examines future directions, including plans to help improve the integration of the Cancer Protocols into clinical, public health, research, and other workflows.

Topics & Concepts

InteroperabilityWorkflowDownstream (manufacturing)CancerMedicineHealth careMedical physicsComputer scienceData scienceWorld Wide WebBusinessDatabaseInternal medicinePolitical scienceMarketingLawBiomedical Text Mining and OntologiesEthics in Clinical ResearchElectronic Health Records Systems
College of American Pathologists Cancer Protocols: From Optimizing Cancer Patient Care to Facilitating Interoperable Reporting and Downstream Data Use | Litcius