| Literature DB >> 34996412 |
Kelsey S Lau-Min1, Lisa A Varughese2, Maria N Nelson3, Christine Cambareri4, Nandi J Reddy5, Randall A Oyer5, Ursina R Teitelbaum1, Sony Tuteja6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pharmacogenetic (PGx) testing for germline variants in the DPYD and UGT1A1 genes can be used to guide fluoropyrimidine and irinotecan dosing, respectively. Despite the known association between PGx variants and chemotherapy toxicity, preemptive testing prior to chemotherapy initiation is rarely performed in routine practice.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers to implementation; Chemotherapy dosing; Gastrointestinal cancers; Pharmacogenetic testing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34996412 PMCID: PMC8742388 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-022-09171-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.638
Fig. 1Schematic of inductive content analysis approach used to iteratively code interview transcript. Figure depicts three exemplar themes: 1) a limited evidence base, 2) a cumbersome and lengthy testing process, and 3) a lack of insurance coverage for preemptive PGx testing. PGx = pharmagonetic. CFIR = Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research
Respondent characteristics
| Characteristic | Frequency (%) |
|---|---|
| Number of respondents | 25 |
| Role | |
| Medical oncologist | 16 (64%) |
| Oncology pharmacist | 9 (36%) |
| Mean age, years (range) | 41.2 (28–67) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 11 (44%) |
| Female | 14 (56%) |
| Race | |
| Non-Hispanic White | 18 (72%) |
| Asian | 7 (28%) |
| Mean time in practice, years (range) | 10.2 (0.5–35) |
| Comfort with interpreting PGx test results | |
| Comfortable or very comfortable | 15 (60%) |
| Neutral | 3 (12%) |
| Uncomfortable or very uncomfortable | 7 (28%) |
| Comfort with using PGx test results to guide chemotherapy dosing | |
| Comfortable or very comfortable | 14 (56%) |
| Neutral | 4 (16%) |
| Uncomfortable or very uncomfortable | 7 (28%) |
| Mean interview duration, minutes (range) | 30.3 (23–41) |
| Interview modality | |
| In-person | 14 (56%) |
| Telephone | 11 (44%) |
Barriers to the implementation of preemptive pharmacogenetic-guided chemotherapy dosing
| CFIR Domain | CFIR Construct | Theme | Representative Quotation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention characteristics | Evidence strength and quality | Limited evidence base | For therapeutic dose recommendations, I want it to be from NCCN, ASCO, or the Europeans … Anything less than that is weak. (O9) I have no problems with palliative intent … but when we talk about curative, unless we had prospective data, I’d be a little more cautious. (O15) |
| Relative Advantage | Questionable impact on clinical care | How often is this really going to change our therapy? ...If we don’t change it, is it a matter of life or death, or is it slight toxicity that we can manage otherwise? (P3) | |
| Complexity | Cumbersome and lengthy testing process | If you don’t make it … as easy as a CBC … you may get a start, but somewhere down the road, it will fall off the track. (O12) I don’t – I can’t – do preemptive [PGx testing] because usually when they’re coming to see me, they need to start therapy sometime in the next couple of weeks, and so I’m not going to have a result back to actually do a meaningful assessment. (O1) | |
| Outer Setting | Patient Needs & Resources | Lack of alternative therapeutic optionsa | If you don’t have 5-FU for a colon cancer patient, you really are very limited in terms of what you have in your treatment armamentarium, especially if they have a curable disease … (O3) |
| External Policies & Incentives | Lack of insurance coverage | I would certainly want to know what, if any, cost or coinsurance was passed down to the patient … I’d be a little bit worried if it turned out that only people with certain types of insurance would be eligible for the testing. (O8) | |
| Inner Setting | Access to Knowledge & Information | Challenging PGx test interpretation | Once I had the information, If you’re in a non-academic center and you don’t have other people with expertise in a multidisciplinary fashion, then you’re sort of stuck with a test that you’re not sure what to do with. (O14) |
| Characteristics of Individuals | Knowledge & Beliefs About the Intervention | Clinician lack of knowledge | I honestly perceive just a baseline deficiency in my own education around |
| Self-efficacy | Remembering to order PGx testing for eligible patients | The prescriber remembering to do it … is always the worst. (P2) |
a Reported by medical oncologists but not oncology pharmacists
Abbreviations: CFIR Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, O Medical oncologist, NCCN National Comprehensive Cancer Network, ASCO American Society of Clinical Oncology, P Oncology pharmacist, PGx Pharmacogenetic, 5-FU 5-fluorouracil