Abstract

Abstract Despite the significant progress made in the multi-modal treatment of childhood malignancies over the last four decades with a concomitantly increased cure rates, the benefit is still largely limited to patients with leukemias, lymphomas and localized non-CNS solid tumors, leaving patients with high-risk non-CNS solid tumours and most CNS malignancies with minimal advancements. More research is critical to understand what drives these cancers and to investigate the best ways to deliver curative therapies. Translational research relies on patient-derived tissue samples, animal models and cell-cultures to understand the biological, genetic, and molecular mechanisms of disease. To facilitate patient care and outcomes it is becoming increasingly important that paediatric clinical trials include tissue availability as part of eligibility criteria, making collection and storage of patient tissue a mandate of personalized medicine and a pillar of modern paediatric cancer medicine. Monash Children’s Cancer Biobank was established in 2011. Since 2017, a total of 64 patients were diagnosed with CNS malignancies across all grades, with an overall 69% of patients’ tissues being bio-banked at the time of initial diagnosis. Through the combination of an educational forum, regular multi-disciplinary meetings, and the early involvement of medical oncology and biobank staff, with our neurosurgical and clinical pathology colleagues, as part of patient management planning, the tissue acquisition for bio-banking increased from 44% to 82% over the course of 5 years. This consequently led to a 100% enrollment to tissue-enabling studies allowing for banking of both fresh-frozen tissue and living cell-line models, facilitating discovery research efforts as part of the Victorian Paediatric Cancer Consortium’s molecular analysis pipeline (https://vicpcc.org.au/dashboard). This significantly improves opportunities for identification of targetable pathways, access to targeted therapies, enrollment onto treatment clinical trials and identification of patients with cancer predisposition syndromes.

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