Literature DB >> 32560187

Complex Oncological Decision-Making Utilizing Fast-and-Frugal Trees in a Community Setting-Role of Academic and Hybrid Modeling.

Ravi Salgia1, Isa Mambetsariev1, Tingting Tan1, Amanda Schwer2, Daryl P Pearlstein3, Hazem Chehabi2, Angel Baroz1, Jeremy Fricke1, Rebecca Pharaon1, Hannah Romo1, Thomas Waddington4, Razmig Babikian1, Linda Buck1, Prakash Kulkarni1, Mary Cianfrocca1, Benjamin Djulbegovic5, Sumanta K Pal1.   

Abstract

Non-small cell lung cancer is a devastating disease and with the advent of targeted therapies and molecular testing, the decision-making process has become complex. While established guidelines and pathways offer some guidance, they are difficult to utilize in a busy community practice and are not always implemented in the community. The rationale of the study was to identify a cohort of patients with lung adenocarcinoma at a City of Hope community site (n = 11) and utilize their case studies to develop a decision-making framework utilizing fast-and-frugal tree (FFT) heuristics. Most patients had stage IV (N = 9, 81.8%) disease at the time of the first consultation. The most common symptoms at initial presentation were cough (N = 5, 45.5%), shortness of breath (N = 3, 27.2%), and weight loss (N = 3, 27.2%). The Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status ranged from 0-1 in all patients in this study. Distribution of molecular drivers among the patients were as follows: EGFR (N = 5, 45.5%), KRAS (N = 2, 18.2%), ALK (N = 2, 18.2%), MET (N = 2, 18.2%), and RET (N = 1, 9.1%). Seven initial FFTs were developed for the various case scenarios, but ultimately the decisions were condensed into one FFT, a molecular stage IV FFT, that arrived at accurate decisions without sacrificing initial information. While these FFT decision trees may seem arbitrary to an experienced oncologist at an academic site, the simplicity of their utility is essential for community practice where patients often do not get molecular testing and are not assigned proper therapy.

Entities:  

Keywords:  actionable mutations; community practice; fast-and-frugal trees; next-generation sequencing; non-small cell lung cancer; personalized medicine

Year:  2020        PMID: 32560187     DOI: 10.3390/jcm9061884

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Med        ISSN: 2077-0383            Impact factor:   4.241


  1 in total

Review 1.  Integrating Academic and Community Cancer Care and Research through Multidisciplinary Oncology Pathways for Value-Based Care: A Review and the City of Hope Experience.

Authors:  Linda D Bosserman; Mary Cianfrocca; Bertram Yuh; Christina Yeon; Helen Chen; Stephen Sentovich; Amy Polverini; Finly Zachariah; Debbie Deaville; Ashley B Lee; Mina S Sedrak; Elisabeth King; Stacy Gray; Denise Morse; Scott Glaser; Geetika Bhatt; Camille Adeimy; TingTing Tan; Joseph Chao; Arin Nam; Isaac B Paz; Laura Kruper; Poornima Rao; Karen Sokolov; Prakash Kulkarni; Ravi Salgia; Jonathan Yamzon; Deron Johnson
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2021-01-07       Impact factor: 4.964

  1 in total

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