Data profile: cancer sample cohorts (stomach, breast, colorectal, and liver) in Koreaopen access
- Authors
- Pak, Daewoo; Jang, Suk Yong; Yoon, Jin-Ha; Kim, Dong Wook; Noh, Jin-Won; Choi, Dong-Woo; Guk, Minyeong; Kim, Hyeri; Oh, Ju-Won; Chae, Heejung; Kong, Hyun-Joo; Kim, Gi Hyun; Nam, Ji Woong; Lee, Ga Ram; Park, Dayun; Jeon, Jehoo; Yun, Byungyoon; Yoo, Ki-Bong; Choi, Kui Son
- Issue Date
- Oct-2025
- Publisher
- Korean Society of Epidemiology
- Keywords
- Breast neoplasms; Colorectal neoplasms; Data profile; Liver neoplasms; Stomach neoplasms
- Citation
- Epidemiology and health, v.47, pp 058 - 058
- Pages
- 1
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
- Journal Title
- Epidemiology and health
- Volume
- 47
- Start Page
- 058
- End Page
- 058
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/81490
- DOI
- 10.4178/epih.e2025058
- ISSN
- 1225-3596
2092-7193
- Abstract
- Cancer Public Library Database (CPLD) links data from four major population-based public sources: the Korea National Can cer Incidence Database in the Korea Central Cancer Registry, cause-of-death data in Statistics Korea, the National Health Infor mation Database in the National Health Insurance Service, and the National Health Insurance Research Database in the Health Insurance Review & Assessment Service. The National Cancer Data Center has developed a new nationally representative sam ple cohort dataset from Korean Clinical Data Utilization for Research Excellence project (K-CURE) CPLD: Stomach Cancer Sample Cohort, Breast Cancer Sample Cohort, Colorectal Cancer Sample Cohort, and Liver Cancer Sample Cohort. The sam ple populations consisted of approximately 21% of all cancer patients from 2012 to 2019. The populations of the Stomach Can cer Sample Cohort, Breast Cancer Sample Cohort, Colorectal Cancer Sample Cohort, and Liver Cancer Sample Cohort were 51,951, 39,586, 53,485, and 27,375 patients, respectively. The dataset included cancer incidence information, demographics, so cioeconomic variables, health utilization data (procedures, diagnoses, and medications), general health checkup data, cancer screening data before and after the cancer incidence, as well as death information. These cohorts could help researchers analyze time-to-event data on mortality, treatment outcomes, comorbid conditions following a cancer diagnosis, and cancer incidence risk factors. The data can be accessed through the K-CURE portal (https://k-cure.mohw.go.kr/).
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