| Literature DB >> 23150730 |
Summer L Cox1, Amy I Zlot, Kerry Silvey, Debi Elliott, Tara Horn, Amber Johnson, Richard F Leman.
Abstract
Introduction. Appropriate use of genetic tests for population-based cancer screening, diagnosis of inherited cancers, and guidance of cancer treatment can improve health outcomes. We investigated clinicians' use and knowledge of eight breast, ovarian, and colorectal cancer genetic tests. Methods. We conducted a randomized survey of 2,191 Oregon providers, asking about their experience with fecal DNA, OncoVue, BRCA, MMR, CYP2D6, tumor gene expression profiling, UGT1A1, and KRAS. Results. Clinicians reported low confidence in their knowledge of medical genetics; most confident were OB-GYNs and specialists. Clinicians were more likely to have ordered/recommended BRCA and MMR than the other tests, and OB-GYNs were twice as likely to have ordered/recommended BRCA testing than primary care providers. Less than 10% of providers ordered/recommended OncoVue, fecal DNA, CYP2D6, or UGT1A1; less than 30% ordered/recommended tumor gene expression profiles or KRAS. The most common reason for not ordering/recommending these tests was lack of familiarity. Conclusions. Use of appropriate, evidence-based testing can help reduce incidence and mortality of certain cancers, but these tests need to be better integrated into clinical practice. Continued evaluation of emerging technologies, dissemination of findings, and an increase in provider confidence and knowledge are necessary to achieve this end.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23150730 PMCID: PMC3485974 DOI: 10.1155/2012/294730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Epidemiol ISSN: 1687-8558
National guidelines for cancer genetic tests included in the 2010 Oregon Health Care Provider Survey.
| Test | Description | Recommendation |
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| Population-based screening for specific cancers | ||
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| OncoVue | Tests for single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with increased breast cancer risk. | No recommendations from |
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| Fecal DNA | Test designed to screen for colorectal cancer, has better sensitivity than the traditional fecal occult blood test (FOBT), and may be more acceptable to the public than colonoscopy. | (i) |
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| Further assessing risk for developing specific cancers in previously identified high-risk populations | ||
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| Tests designed to detect specific | (i) |
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| Testing for Lynch syndrome (previously known as HNPCC) includes testing of one or all of the most common mismatch repair genes ( | (i) |
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| Guiding cancer treatment decisions in those already diagnosedwith cancer | ||
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| Test designed to detect specific | (i) |
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| Tumor gene expression profiles | Three tests, Oncotype DX, MammaPrint, and H/I ratio, are currently being marketed to help women with breast cancer and their providers make treatment decisions and estimate risk of cancer recurrence. | (i) |
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| Test designed to help determine whether tamoxifen is likely to be a useful therapy in those with estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer. | (i) No recommendations from |
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| Testing for Lynch Syndrome (previously known as HNPCC) includes testing of one or all of the most common mismatch repair genes ( | (i) |
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| Test designed to help identify colorectal cancer patients who are at increased risk for an adverse reaction to irinotecan therapy and allow for changes in management (e.g., drug choice, dosage). | (i) |
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| Testing for | (i) |
Likelihood that clinicians reported ordering or recommending specific cancer genomic test in the past 12 months, by provider group.
| Total | PCPsb | Naturopaths | OB-GYNs | Specialistsf | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| 176 (62.6%) | 51 (53.7%) | 14 (36.8%) |
| 36 (70.6%) |
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| 91 (63.6%) | 14 (66.7%) | 14 (46.7%) | 11 (64.7%) | 52 (69.3%) |
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| Lynch syndrome testingm for patients without cancern,o | 68 (49.6%) | 9 (25.0%) | 4 (50.0%) | 10 (50.0%) | 45 (61.6%) |
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| Lynch syndrome testingm for patients with cancern,p | 56 (61.5%) | 5 (45.5%) | NAq | NAq | 50 (65.8%) |
aBolded estimates indicate significant findings.
bPCPs: primary care providers include family physicians, internal medicine physicians, primary care nurse practitioners, and primary care physician assistants.
cThe column % reflects the percent responding within each practice category.
dOR: odds ratio.
eCI: confidence interval.
fSpecialists consisted of surgeons, colorectal surgeons, general surgeons, gastroenterologists, oncologists, and gynecologic oncologists.
gBC: breast cancer.
hOC: ovarian cancer.
iAdjusted for number of patients seen per week and confidence in breast and ovarian cancer genetics.
jAmong clinicians who recommend breast and ovarian screening.
k P > 0.05.
lAmong clinicians who treat breast and/or ovarian cancer.
mSpecifically testing for mismatch repair (MMR) genes, which may include testing in MCH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2 genes.
nAdjusted for confidence in knowledge of colorectal cancer genetics.
oAmong clinicians who recommend colorectal cancer screening.
pAmong clinicians who treat colorectal cancer.
qUnable to report estimates due to small cell size.
Reasons why clinicians did not order or recommend various cancer genomic tests among clinicians who do not order that specific test.
| Not familiar with test | Clinical outcomes would not change | Costs too much/insurance will not cover it | Test not valid | Practice guidelines do not include this test | Test not relevant | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OncoVuec,d | 787 (79.0%) | 24 (2.4%) | 106 (10.6%) | 11 (1.1%) | 173 (17.4%) | 75 (7.5%) |
| (76.45%–81.4%) | (1.6%–3.6%) | (8.9%–12.7%) | (0.6%–2.0%) | (15.1%–19.9%) | (6.1%–9.3%) | |
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| Fecal DNAe | 783 (71.8%) | 37 (3.4%) | 119 (10.9%) | 47 (4.3%) | 216 (19.8%) | 57 (5.3%) |
| (69.1%–74.4%) | (2.5%–4.7%) | (9.2%–12.9%) | (3.3%– 5.7%) | (17.6%–22.3%) | (4.1%–6.7%) | |
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| Tumor gene | 126 (50.6%) | 14 (5.6%) | 21 (8.4%) | 6 (2.4%) | 17 (6.8%) | 21 (8.4%) |
| (44.4%–56.8%) | (3.3%–9.3%) | (5.6%–12.6%) | (1.1%–5.3%) | (4.3%–10.7%) | (5.5%–12.6%) | |
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| 131 (42.1%) | 10 (3.2%) | 10 (3.2%) | 4 (1.3%) | 19 (6.1%) | 96 (30.9%) |
| (36.7%–47.7%) | (1.7%–5.9%) | (1.7%–5.9%) | (0.5%–3.4%) | (3.9%–9.4%) | (26.0%–36.3)h | |
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| 187 (58.4%) | NAj | 7 (2.2%) | NAj | 16 (5.0%) | 126 (39.4%) |
| (52.9%–63.7%) | (1.0%–4.5%) | (3.1%–8.0%) | (34.1%–44.9%)k | |||
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| 108 (40.3%) | NAj | 4 (1.5%) | NAj | 9 (3.4%) | 127 (47.4%) |
| (34.6%–46.3%) | (0.6%–3.9%) | (1.7%–6.4%) | (41.4%–53.4%)l | |||
aThe column % reflects the percent responding within each practice category.
bCI: confidence interval.
cOncoVue is a multigene screening panel for patients without breast cancer.
dAmong clinicians who recommend breast and ovarian screening to patients without breast cancer.
eAmong clinicians who recommend colorectal cancer screening to patients without colorectal cancer.
fBreast cancer tumor gene expression profiles include Oncotype DX, MammaPrint, and H/I ratio.
gAmong clinicians who treat patients for breast cancer.
hTest not relevant to patients because clinician does not prescribe tamoxifen to patients.
iAmong clinicians who treat patients for colorectal cancer.
jUnable to report estimates due to small cell size.
kTest not relevant to patients because clinician does not prescribe irinotecan to patients.
lTest not relevant to patients because clinician does not prescribe anti-EGFR therapy to patients.
Reasons why clinicians reported ordering specific cancer genomics tests in the past 12 months, among clinicians who ordered the genetic tests.
| Patient met practice guidelines | Guide future screening decisions | Guide prophylactic treatment decisions | Patient specifically requests it | |
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| 207 (85.5%) | 192 (79.7%) | 192 (79.7%) | 198 (81.1%) |
| (80.5%–89.5%) | (74.1%–84.3%) | (74.1%–84.3%) | (75.7%–85.6%) | |
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| 100 (82.0%) | 91 (75.2%) | 93 (76.2%) | 97 (78.9%) |
| (74.0%–87.9%) | (66.6%–82.2%) | (67.8%–83.0%) | (70.6%–85.3%) | |
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| Lynch syndrome testingg for patients w/o CRCh,i | 72 (63.7%) | 69 (60.5%) | 68 (58.6%) | 65 (57.0%) |
| (54.3%–72.2%) | (51.2%–69.2%) | (49.3%–67.3%) | (47.7%–65.9%) | |
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| Lynch syndrome testingg for patients with CRCh,j | 50 (72.5%) | 46 (67.6%) | 27 (40.3%) | 32 (50.0%) |
| (60.5%–81.9) | (55.4%–77.9%) | (29.0%–52.7%)k | (37.7%–62.3%) | |
aThe column % reflects the percent responding within each practice category.
bCI: confidence interval.
cBC: breast cancer.
dOC: ovarian cancer.
eAmong clinicians who recommend breast and ovarian screening to patients without breast cancer.
fAmong clinicians who treat breast and ovarian cancer.
gSpecifically testing for mismatch repair (MMR) genes, which may include testing in MCH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2 genes.
hCRC: colorectal cancer.
iAmong clinicians who recommend colorectal cancer screening to patients without colorectal cancer.
jAmong clinicians who treat colorectal cancer.
kFor Lynch syndrome testing for patients with cancer, the phrasing was “guide chemotherapeutic treatment decisions.”
(a) Demographic and practice characteristicsa,b.
| PCPsc | Naturopaths | OB-GYNs | Specialistsf | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 363 (30.0%) | 216 (17.9%) | 333 (27.5%) | 297 (24.6%) |
| (27.5%–32.7%) | (15.8%–20.1%) | (25.1%–30.1%) | (22.2%–27.1%) | |
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| Mean age (years) | 357 (48.0 yrs) |
| 329 (47.8 yrs) | 288 (47.6 yrs) |
| (26 yrs–76 yrs)g |
| (27 yrs–80 yrs)g | (27 yrs–79 yrs)g | |
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| Number of patients seen per week | ||||
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| <50 | 104 (28.8%) |
| 103 (31.0%) | 127 (43.3%) |
| (24.4%–33.8%) |
| (26.3%–36.2%) | (37.8%–49.1%) | |
| 50–75 | 129 (35.7%) | 25 (11.7%) | 126 (38.0%) | 121 (41.3%) |
| (31.0%–40.9%) | (8.0%–16.7%) | (32.9%–43.3%) | (35.8%–47.0%) | |
| >75 | 127 (35.5%) |
| 103 (31.0%) |
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| (30.5%–40.4%) |
| (26.3%–36.2%) |
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| Recommend BOCh |
| 196 (92.0%) |
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| (87.5%–95.0%) |
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| Recommend CRCi | 355 (98.3%) | 204 (95.8%) | 316 (94.9%) | 275 (93.5%) |
| (96.4%–99.3%) | (92.1%–97.8%) | (91.9%–96.8%) | (90.1%–95.8%) | |
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| Treat patients for BOCh | 47 (13.1%) |
| 53 (16.1%) |
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| (10.0%–17.0%) |
| (12.5%–20.4%) |
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| Treat patients for CRCi | 48 (13.3%) |
| 0 |
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| (10.1%–17.2%) |
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aCategory totals may be less than the total number of respondents, due to missing values.
bBolded estimates indicate significant findings.
cPCPs: primary care providers which include family physicians, internal medicine physicians, primary care nurse practitioners, and primary care physician assistants.
dThe column % reflects the percent responding within each practice category.
eCI: confidence interval.
fSpecialists consisted of surgeons, colorectal surgeons, general surgeons, gastroenterologists, oncologists, and gynecologic oncologists.
gRange in years.
hBOC: breast and ovarian cancer.
iCRC: colorectal cancer.
(b) Confidence in personal knowledge of medical geneticsa,b.
| PCPsc | Naturopaths | OB-GYNs | Specialistsf | |
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| Confidence in personal knowledge of BOCg genetics | ||||
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| Not at all | 111 (30.6%) | 92 (42.6%) |
| 87 (30.0%) |
| (26.1%–35.5%) | (36.2%–49.3%) |
| (25.0%–35.5%) | |
| Somewhat | 188 (51.8%) | 90 (41.7%) | 132 (39.6%) | 115 (39.7%) |
| (46.6%–56.9%) | (35.3%–48.4%) | (34.5%–45.0%) | (34.2%–45.4%) | |
| Moderately/very | 64 (17.6%) | 34 (15.7%) |
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| (14.1%–21.9%) | (11.5%–21.2%) |
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| Confidence in personal knowledge of CRCh genetics | ||||
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| Not at all | 110 (30.5%) |
| 77 (23.2%) |
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| (25.9–35.4) |
| (19.0–28.0) |
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| Somewhat | 190 (52.6%) | 81 (37.5%) | 176 (53.0%) | 105 (36.0%) |
| (47.5%–57.7%) | (31.3%–44.2%) | (47.6%–58.3%) | (30.7%–41.6%) | |
| Moderately/very | 61 (16.9%) | 21 (9.7%) | 79 (23.8%) |
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| (13.4%–21.1%) | (6.4–14.5) | (19.5–28.7) |
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aCategory totals may be less than the total number of respondents, due to missing values.
bBolded estimates indicate significant findings.
cPCPs: primary care providers which include family physicians, internal medicine physicians, primary care nurse practitioners, and primary care physician assistants.
dThe column % reflects the percent responding within each practice category.
eCI: confidence interval.
fSpecialists consisted of surgeons, colorectal surgeons, general surgeons, gastroenterologists, oncologists, and gynecologic oncologists.
gBOC: breast and ovarian cancer.
hCRC: colorectal cancer.
(c) Referral of patients to a genetic specialista,b.
| PCPsc | Naturopaths | OB-GYNs | Specialistsf | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Referg patients w/o cancer to a genetic specialist for | 111 (67.7%) | 27 (50.0%) | 225 (87.5%) | 82 (75.9%) |
| (60.1%–74.4%) | (36.9%–63.1%) | (82.9%–91.1%) | (67.0%–83.1%) | |
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| Referg patients w/cancer to a genetic specialist for | 19 (55.9%) | 25 (53.2%) | 40 (87.0%) | 121 (75.6%) |
| (39.1%–71.5%) | (39.0%–66.9%) | (73.8%–94.0%) | (68.3%–81.7%) | |
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| Referg patients w/o cancer to a genetic specialist for | 30 (56.6%) | NAh |
| 122 (77.2%) |
| (43.0%–69.2%) |
| (70.0%–83.1%) | ||
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| Referg patients w/cancer to a genetic specialist for | NAh | NAh | 131 (81.9%) | 138 (78.0%) |
| (75.1%–87.1%) | (71.2%–83.5%) | |||
aCategory totals may be less than the total number of respondents, due to missing values.
bBolded estimates indicate significant findings.
cPCPs: primary care providers which include family physicians, internal medicine physicians, primary care nurse practitioners, and primary care physician assistants.
dThe column % reflects the percent responding within each practice category.
eCI: confidence interval.
fSpecialists consisted of surgeons, colorectal surgeons, general surgeons, gastroenterologists, oncologists, and gynecologic oncologists.
gAmong providers who suspect a mutation, those who always or usually refer to a genetic specialist.
hUnable to report estimates due to small cell size.