In fact you have two basis : one relative to the camera, the other is absolute (the world). So you basically want to transform your relative data into absolute data.
Location
This is the easiest one. You have to translate the (X,Y,Z) position by the vector t(U,V,W). So all your positions in absolute are (Ax, Ay, Az) = (X,Y,Z)+t = (X+U,Y+V,Z+W).
Orientation
This is a bit more difficult. You have to find the rotation matrix that rotate your camera from (I assume) (0,0,1) to (Ru,Rv,Rw). You should look at Basic Rotation Matrices in order to decompose the 2 rotations that take (0,0,1) to (Ru,Rv,Rw) (one according to X axis, one according to Z axis for example). I advise you to draw the absolute basis and the vector (Ru,Rv,Rw) on a sheet of paper, it is the simplest way to get the right result.
So you have 2 basic rotations matrices r1 and r2. The resultant rotation matrix r = r1*r2 (or r2*r1, it doesn't matter). So the absolute orientation of your object is (ARx, ARy, ARz)
= r*(Rx,Ry,Rz).
Hope this helps !