JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (Jun 2021)

Development of the Czech Childhood Cancer Information System: Data Analysis and Interactive Visualization

  • Denisa Krejčí,
  • Matěj Karolyi,
  • Lucie Pehalová,
  • Jakub Ščavnický,
  • Michaela Zapletalová,
  • Ivana Katinová,
  • Jaroslav Štěrba,
  • Jan Starý,
  • Lenka Šnajdrová,
  • Martin Komenda,
  • Ladislav Dušek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/23990
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 6
p. e23990

Abstract

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BackgroundThe knowledge of cancer burden in the population, its time trends, and the possibility of international comparison is an important starting point for cancer programs. A reliable interactive tool describing cancer epidemiology in children and adolescents has been nonexistent in the Czech Republic until recently. ObjectiveThe goal of this study is to develop a new web portal entitled the Czech Childhood Cancer Information System (CCCIS), which would provide information on childhood cancer epidemiology in the Czech Republic. MethodsData on childhood cancers have been obtained from the Czech National Cancer Registry. These data were validated using the clinical database of childhood cancer patients and subsequently combined with data from the National Register of Hospitalised Patients and with data from death certificates. These validated data were then used to determine the incidence and survival rates of childhood cancer patients aged 0 to 19 years who were diagnosed in the period 1994 to 2016 (N=9435). Data from death certificates were used to monitor long-term mortality trends. The technical solution is based on the robust PHP development Symfony framework, with the PostgreSQL system used to accommodate the data basis. ResultsThe web portal has been available for anyone since November 2019, providing basic information for experts (ie, analyses and publications) on individual diagnostic groups of childhood cancers. It involves an interactive tool for analytical reporting, which provides information on the following basic topics in the form of graphs or tables: incidence, mortality, and overall survival. Feedback was obtained and the accuracy of outputs published on the CCCIS portal was verified using the following methods: the validation of the theoretical background and the user testing. ConclusionsWe developed software capable of processing data from multiple sources, which is freely available to all users and makes it possible to carry out automated analyses even for users without mathematical background; a simple selection of a topic to be analyzed is required from the user.