| Literature DB >> 26851938 |
S E P Joosten1, V P Retèl2, V M H Coupé1, M M van den Heuvel3, W H van Harten4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) is expected to lift molecular diagnostics in clinical oncology to the next level. It enables simultaneous identification of mutations in a patient tumor, after which targeted therapy may be assigned. This approach could improve patient survival and/or assist in controlling healthcare costs by offering expensive treatment to only those likely to benefit. However, NGS has yet to make its way into the clinic. Health Technology Assessment can support the adoption and implementation of a novel technology, but at this early stage many of the required variables are still unknown.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26851938 PMCID: PMC4744630 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2100-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Overview of methodology. CEA = Cost-effectiveness analysis
Baseline-and what-if scenarios
| Baseline scenario: “Within 5–10 years, NGS gene panels will become common practice for personalized treatment in oncology” | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Domain | What-if scenarios (likelihood ± SD) | Effect | Barrier/facilitator |
| Social | 1. | Higher uptake and more compliance |
|
| 2. | |||
| Technical | 3. | Higher uptake and less failures | |
| 4. | |||
| Reimbursement | 5. | Less uptake |
|
| Clinical utility and evidence generation | 6. | No improved survival and slow release of new target/therapy combinations | |
| 7. | |||
| 8. | |||
| 9. | |||
| Market access | 10. | Less uptake | |
| 11. | |||
| 12. | |||
Twelve potential deviations from a baseline scenario in which NGS-based gene panels are implemented in clinical oncology. Respondents were asked to rate the likelihood of their occurrence on a scale from 0-100 %. Since several scenarios were presented to relevant professions only, combined with some missing values, the number of respondents per scenario varied
Parameters and corresponding questions
| Domain | Parameter | Q | Average ± SD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Social factors | Patients interested in NGS (prim/meta) | Q1 | 28,3 ± 29,2/65,3 ± 32,1 | |
| Patients interested in trial (prim/meta) | Q2 | 41,5 ± 26,6/78,2 ± 16,1 | ||
| Consult extra (min) | Q3 | 13,2 ± 12,4 | ||
| Education extra (hrs.) | Q10 | 25,1 ± 26,1 | ||
| NGS Adoption given: | RCT3 | Q6 | 84,9 ± 23,6 | |
| Pros. observational | 62,3 ± 20,3 | |||
| Retro. observational | 39,6 ± 22,6 | |||
| Lower levels | 16,7 ± 8,6 | |||
| Technical Factors | Max. turnover rate (days) | Q9 | 17,8 ± 21,3 | |
| Dutch institutes able to supply FF | Q16 | 50,5 ± 36,5 | ||
| Min. sensitivity/specificity | Q15 | 90,5 ± 5,7/89,0 ± 9,7 | ||
| Max. failure rate | Q17 | 18,4 ± 20,1 | ||
| Re-biopsy decline: | CRC | Q18 | 33,3 ± 23,6 | |
| NSCLC | 30,0 ± 22,9 | |||
| Melanoma | 8,5 ± 5,9 | |||
| Re-biopsy unfeasible: | CRC | Q19 | 19,2 ± 11,1 | |
| NSCLC | 22,9 ± 16,0 | |||
| Melanoma | 9,3 ± 10,0 | |||
| Min. storage tissue (yrs.) | Q14 | 24,2 ± 22,1 | ||
| Min. storage NGS results (yrs.) | Q13 | 22,6 ± 21,4 | ||
| Reimbursement | Pay extra for NGS panel (euro) | Q12 | 380,8 ± 316,6 | |
| Probability opt for NGS panel if €1000 | Q40 | 44,0 ± 44,0 | ||
| Clinical utility and evidence generation | Nb. Targets per patient | Q37 | 6,6 ± 7,5 | |
| Nb. new therapies in five years | Q29 | 22,5 ± 20,4 | ||
| Off-label therapy required | Q22 | 30,2 ± 26,5 | ||
| Physicians willing to prescribe off-label | Q23 | 44,6 ± 31,6 | ||
| Probability reimbursement off-label | Q27 | 28,0 ± 32,0 | ||
| Lenient towards off-label (yrs.) | Q26 | 9,8 ± 12,4 | ||
| Market access | Min. years NGS common practice | Q33 | 6,5 ± 6,3 | |
| Min. years competition other technology | Q35 | 9,6 ± 5,5 | ||
Depicted are the mean results (percentages unless stated otherwise) and standard deviations on quantitative parameters, in order of appearance. Column Q refers to the number of the corresponding questions in the questionnaire (Additional file 1). NGS next generation sequencing, Prim primary cancer, Meta metastatic cancer, FF fresh frozen [tissue preservation]
Respondent characteristics
| Profession | Respondents (n) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| NKI | External | ||
| Physicians |
| 5 | 4 |
|
| 4 | 1 | |
| Biologist |
| 2 | 5 |
|
| 0 | 4 | |
| Policy | 0 | 3 | |
| Epidemiologist | 1 | 0 | |
| Total | 12 | 17 | |
Respondent specifics are described here, distinguishing between Netherlands Cancer Institute employees (NKI) and external respondents. 4 respondents were situated outside the Netherlands.a Other: specializations beyond medical oncology included pathology (2), pulmonology (1), dermatology (1) or surgery (1)
Respondent propensity to prescribe off-label therapy
| Level of evidence | Adjuvant (n = 16) | Metastatic (n = 26) |
|---|---|---|
|
| 6/16; 37,5 % | 7/26; 27,0 % |
|
| 2/16; 12,5 % | 3/26; 11,5 % |
|
| 4/16; 25 % | 6/26; 23,1 % |
|
| 2/16; 12,5 % | 1/26; 0,04 % |
|
| “tissue-based labelling should be changed” (1/16; 6,25 %), “Bayesian approach should be used” (1/16; 6,25 %) | “only as part of a trial” (2/26; 0,08 %) and 7 individual comments (0,04 % each) including “Based on RCTII data”, “Based on RCTII with molecularly selected patients”, “Casuistic evidence from other disease entities”, “Any time”, “tissue-based labelling should be changed”, “Bayesian approach should be used”, “Depending on costs” |
Respondents were presented with the following hypothetical situation: “A NGS gene panel was only able to identify one molecular target in a patient’s tumour. However, the corresponding targeted therapy has not been registered for that type of cancer yet, thus off-label treatment may be the only option” They were then asked based on what level of evidence and stage of disease they would prescribe the therapy. The question regarding the metastatic setting was asked in all versions of the questionnaire, while the question for the adjuvant setting was only posed in the physicians and policy version. Therefore, the number of respondents per column differs
Recommendations to promote adoption of NGS in clinical oncology
| Domain | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Social | ▪ Further investigate patients’ perspective |
| Technical | ▪ Use desired technical specifications as a guideline for development of a NGS panel. |
| Reimbursement | ▪ Further investigate willingness-to-pay |
| Clinical utility and evidence generation | ▪ Advocate novel evidence generation designs. |
| Market access | ▪ Enter the market rapidly to maximize window of opportunity |
FFPE fresh frozen paraffin embedded [tissue preservation]