Pearl A Campbell, K. Thavorn, B. Lo, Ali Karimnezhad, T. Perkins, R. Urquhart, S. Kamel‐Reid, H. Sekhon, D. Stewart
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However, for many patients with metastatic NSCLC the only tissue available is from fine needle aspirates (FNAs). Given the limited number and heterogeneity of cells found in FNAs and the expanding number of clinically actionable mutations, the development and implementation of testing strategies that rapidly and accurately define driver mutations in NSCLC remains a challenge. Our project focuses on the identification of best methods (pre-analytical, analytical, and bioinformatic) to identify driver mutations in lung FNAs to standardize targeted NGS testing for NSCLC. The overarching goal of this project is to develop a strategy for Canada-wide implementation of the developed test. As a first step in this process, our team organized a stakeholder meeting to: A) Identify potential individual and/or system level challenges and barriers to implementation of standardized protocols for molecular oncology diagnostics; B) Outline guidelines and strategies to overcome identified challenges and barriers; and C) Initiate a research project to further study the barriers and facilitators of implementing Canada-wide diagnostic testing strategies for personalized cancer care. For this presentation, we will outline key challenges that impact implementation of the new test, including tumor characteristics (cellularity, heterogeneity); cost and reimbursement issues; required turn around times; bioinformatic requirements; testing strategy (technical limitations of test, panel size); technical staffing and infrastructure requirements; and barriers to implementation of the test into routine standard of care. Finally, we will present a preliminary workflow map, which builds upon the Lung Cancer Pathway Maps provided by Cancer Care Ontario (https://www.cancercareontario.ca/en/pathway-maps/lung-cancer) and addresses these barriers and explores various scenarios for implementation of new testing strategies. Citation Format: Pearl A. Campbell, Kednapa Thavorn, Bryan Lo, Ali Karimnezhad, Theodore J. Perkins, Robin Urquhart, Suzanne Kamel-Reid, Harmanjatinder Sekhon, David J. Stewart. Challenges in the implementation of molecular diagnostic testing for non-small cell lung cancer [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. 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Our project focuses on the identification of best methods (pre-analytical, analytical, and bioinformatic) to identify driver mutations in lung FNAs to standardize targeted NGS testing for NSCLC. The overarching goal of this project is to develop a strategy for Canada-wide implementation of the developed test. As a first step in this process, our team organized a stakeholder meeting to: A) Identify potential individual and/or system level challenges and barriers to implementation of standardized protocols for molecular oncology diagnostics; B) Outline guidelines and strategies to overcome identified challenges and barriers; and C) Initiate a research project to further study the barriers and facilitators of implementing Canada-wide diagnostic testing strategies for personalized cancer care. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
下一代测序(NGS)已被用于癌症基因突变的分类。最近使用NGS的研究已经确定了特定的基因突变,这些突变可靠地预测了许多形式的癌症,特别是非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)的靶向治疗成功。重要的是,与化疗相比,有致癌驱动突变的患者使用靶向药物可以更好地控制肿瘤,而那些缺乏这种突变的患者从化疗中获益更多。为了检测可操作的突变,必须对所有转移性疾病患者进行检测。突变测定通常是用手术样本中提取的组织进行的。然而,对于许多转移性非小细胞肺癌患者来说,唯一可用的组织是细针抽吸(FNAs)。考虑到FNAs中发现的细胞数量有限和异质性,以及临床可操作突变的数量不断增加,开发和实施快速准确定义NSCLC驱动突变的检测策略仍然是一个挑战。我们的项目重点是确定最佳方法(分析前、分析和生物信息学)来识别肺FNAs的驱动突变,以标准化NSCLC的靶向NGS检测。该项目的总体目标是制定一项战略,以便在加拿大范围内实施已开发的测试。作为该过程的第一步,我们的团队组织了一次利益相关者会议,以:a)确定实施分子肿瘤诊断标准化协议的潜在个人和/或系统级挑战和障碍;B)概述克服已确定的挑战和障碍的指导方针和战略;C)启动一项研究项目,进一步研究在加拿大范围内实施个性化癌症治疗诊断测试策略的障碍和促进因素。在本次演讲中,我们将概述影响新测试实施的关键挑战,包括肿瘤特征(细胞性、异质性);成本和报销问题;所需的周转时间;生物信息学要求;测试策略(测试技术限制、面板尺寸);技术人员和基础设施要求;以及将该检测纳入常规护理标准的障碍。最后,我们将提出一个初步的工作流图,它建立在安大略省癌症护理中心(https://www.cancercareontario.ca/en/pathway-maps/lung-cancer)提供的肺癌通路图的基础上,解决了这些障碍,并探索了实施新测试策略的各种场景。引用格式:Pearl A. Campbell, Kednapa Thavorn, Bryan Lo, Ali Karimnezhad, Theodore J. Perkins, Robin Urquhart, Suzanne Kamel-Reid, Harmanjatinder Sekhon, David J. Stewart非小细胞肺癌分子诊断检测实施中的挑战[摘要]。摘自:2019年美国癌症研究协会年会论文集;2019年3月29日至4月3日;亚特兰大,乔治亚州。费城(PA): AACR;癌症杂志,2019;79(13增刊):摘要nr 3355。
Abstract 3355: Challenges in the implementation of molecular diagnostic testing for non-small cell lung cancer
Next generation sequencing (NGS) has been used to catalogue genetic mutations in cancer. Recent studies employing NGS have identified specific genetic mutations that reliably predict therapeutic success with targeted treatment in many forms of cancer, and particularly in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Importantly, patients with oncogenic driver mutations have better tumor control with targeted agents than with chemotherapy, while those lacking such a mutation derive more benefit from chemotherapy. To detect actionable mutations, all patients with metastatic disease must be tested. Mutation assays are generally developed using tissues derived from surgical samples. However, for many patients with metastatic NSCLC the only tissue available is from fine needle aspirates (FNAs). Given the limited number and heterogeneity of cells found in FNAs and the expanding number of clinically actionable mutations, the development and implementation of testing strategies that rapidly and accurately define driver mutations in NSCLC remains a challenge. Our project focuses on the identification of best methods (pre-analytical, analytical, and bioinformatic) to identify driver mutations in lung FNAs to standardize targeted NGS testing for NSCLC. The overarching goal of this project is to develop a strategy for Canada-wide implementation of the developed test. As a first step in this process, our team organized a stakeholder meeting to: A) Identify potential individual and/or system level challenges and barriers to implementation of standardized protocols for molecular oncology diagnostics; B) Outline guidelines and strategies to overcome identified challenges and barriers; and C) Initiate a research project to further study the barriers and facilitators of implementing Canada-wide diagnostic testing strategies for personalized cancer care. For this presentation, we will outline key challenges that impact implementation of the new test, including tumor characteristics (cellularity, heterogeneity); cost and reimbursement issues; required turn around times; bioinformatic requirements; testing strategy (technical limitations of test, panel size); technical staffing and infrastructure requirements; and barriers to implementation of the test into routine standard of care. Finally, we will present a preliminary workflow map, which builds upon the Lung Cancer Pathway Maps provided by Cancer Care Ontario (https://www.cancercareontario.ca/en/pathway-maps/lung-cancer) and addresses these barriers and explores various scenarios for implementation of new testing strategies. Citation Format: Pearl A. Campbell, Kednapa Thavorn, Bryan Lo, Ali Karimnezhad, Theodore J. Perkins, Robin Urquhart, Suzanne Kamel-Reid, Harmanjatinder Sekhon, David J. Stewart. Challenges in the implementation of molecular diagnostic testing for non-small cell lung cancer [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 3355.