Equitable Access to Genomic Molecular Testing for Australian Cancer Patients: Insights from the Victorian Precision Oncology Summit
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Summit Organisation and Participants
2. Workshop Outcomes and Common Themes
2.1. Workforce Education
Discussion Outcomes
2.2. Patient Education and Awareness
Discussion Outcomes
2.3. Standardisation
Discussion Outcomes
2.4. Centralisation
Discussion Outcomes
2.5. Funding
Discussion Outcomes
2.6. Data and Sharing
Discussion Outcomes
3. Next Steps
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Pre-Summit scoping survey (Audience: Oncologists/Haematologists)
- Introductory text:
- The following questions relate to your service. If you attend multiple locations, please answer for your primary service.
- 1.
- Where is your service located?
- a.
- Regional Victoria
- b.
- Metropolitan Melbourne
- c.
- Other (please specify)
- 2.
- Is your service public or private?
- a.
- Public
- b.
- Private
- c.
- Other (please specify)
- The following questions relate to non-standard of care molecular testing.
- For the purposes of this survey, “molecular testing” is defined as either a genomic or gene expression assay (e.g., next generation sequencing panels, RNA sequencing), and “non-standard” is defined as any molecular testing assay that is not MBS-reimbursed. The following questions relate to non-standard of care molecular testing.
- 3.
- Do you order non-standard of care molecular testing for any of your patients?
- a.
- Yes—go to question 4 (blue questions)
- b.
- No—go to question 8 (orange question)
- 4.
- For which tumour streams do you refer patients for non-standard of care molecular testing (select all that apply)?
- Haematological cancers
- Central nervous system cancers
- Lung cancers
- Melanoma and other skin cancers
- Breast cancer
- Colorectal cancer
- Upper gastrointestinal tract cancers
- Prostate cancer and other genitourinary cancers
- Gynaecological cancers
- Head and neck cancers
- Sarcomas
- Rare cancers
- Cancers of unknown primary
- Other cancers (please specify)
- 5.
- How do your patients access non-standard of care molecular testing in your service (select all that apply)?
- Clinical trials (i.e., to assess eligibility for biomarker driven interventional trials)
- Research programs (i.e., programs that provide molecular testing with or without a treatment intervention, e.g., MoST, ASPIRATION)
- Local cancer centre NGS panels
- Private pathology services based in Australia
- Commercial assays based overseas (e.g., Foundation Medicine, MSK-IMPACT, Guardant Health)
- Other (please specify)
- 6.
- Approximately how many non-standard of care tests would you order in a given year?
- Less than 10
- 10–30
- 30–50
- Greater than 50
- 7.
- What is the typical source of funding for non-standard of care tests in your service?
- Patient-funded.
- Externally funded (for example, through a clinical trial or research program at no cost to the patient)
- Other (please specify):
- Continue to question 10
- 8.
- What do you think are the main barriers to widespread uptake of non-standard of care molecular tests? Select all that apply.
- ▪
- Lack of funding available
- ▪
- Overall process too time consuming
- ▪
- Turnaround time to receive results is too long
- ▪
- Not readily accessible
- ▪
- Lack of support interpreting data
- ▪
- Lack of awareness of available NGS tests
- ▪
- Lack of awareness of costs
- ▪
- Lack of familiarity with NGS test scope
- ▪
- No clinical utility
- ▪
- The need to obtain patient consent for research-based testing
- ▪
- Other (please specify)
- 9.
- In your clinical practice, what is the primary reason you do not order non-standard of care molecular testing for your patients?
- ▪
- Lack of funding available
- ▪
- Overall process too time consuming.
- ▪
- Turnaround time to receive results is too long.
- ▪
- Not readily accessible
- ▪
- Lack of support interpreting data
- ▪
- Lack of awareness of available NGS tests
- ▪
- Lack of awareness of costs
- ▪
- Lack of familiarity with NGS test scope
- ▪
- No clinical utility
- ▪
- The need to obtain patient consent for research-based testing
- ▪
- Other (please specify)
- Continue to question 10
- 10.
- Do you attend, or have you ever attended, molecular tumour board meetings?
- Yes
- No
- 11.
- Please comment on any measures you think could be important towards improving access to non-standard of care molecular testing for patients across Victoria. Some examples could include education, infrastructure, standardised pathways of access and turnaround times.
- 12.
- Do you have any further comments about non-standard of care molecular testing you would like to share (optional)?
- The following questions relate to standard of care molecular testing.
- For the purposes of this survey, “molecular testing” is defined as either a genomic or gene expression assay (e.g., next generation sequencing panels, RNA sequencing), and “standard” is defined as any molecular testing assay that is MBS-reimbursed.
- 13.
- Do you (or the treating team) order standard of care molecular testing for any of your patients?
- Yes—go to question 14 (purple questions)
- No—Why not? [To pop up].
- 14.
- For which tumour streams do you refer patients for standard of care molecular testing?
- Lung
- Melanoma and other skin cancers
- Breast
- Colorectal
- Prostate cancer and other genitourinary cancers
- Gynaecological cancers
- Other (please specify)
- 15.
- Approximately how many standard of care tests would you order in a given year?
- Less than 10
- 10–30
- 30–50
- Greater than 50
- 16.
- Do you have any further comments about standard of care molecular testing that you would like to share (optional)?
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Theme | Potential Actions |
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Workforce education |
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Patient education and awareness |
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Standardisation |
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Centralisation |
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Funding |
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Data and sharing |
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Share and Cite
Dall, G.; Harris, K.; Chan, N.; Luen, S.J.; Frentzas, S.; Day, D.; Barrett, M.; Kilgour, A.; Buzza, M. Equitable Access to Genomic Molecular Testing for Australian Cancer Patients: Insights from the Victorian Precision Oncology Summit. Curr. Oncol. 2024, 31, 4519-4530. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31080337
Dall G, Harris K, Chan N, Luen SJ, Frentzas S, Day D, Barrett M, Kilgour A, Buzza M. Equitable Access to Genomic Molecular Testing for Australian Cancer Patients: Insights from the Victorian Precision Oncology Summit. Current Oncology. 2024; 31(8):4519-4530. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31080337
Chicago/Turabian StyleDall, Genevieve, Karen Harris, Nonie Chan, Stephen J. Luen, Sophia Frentzas, Daphne Day, Michelle Barrett, Anna Kilgour, and Mark Buzza. 2024. "Equitable Access to Genomic Molecular Testing for Australian Cancer Patients: Insights from the Victorian Precision Oncology Summit" Current Oncology 31, no. 8: 4519-4530. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31080337
APA StyleDall, G., Harris, K., Chan, N., Luen, S. J., Frentzas, S., Day, D., Barrett, M., Kilgour, A., & Buzza, M. (2024). Equitable Access to Genomic Molecular Testing for Australian Cancer Patients: Insights from the Victorian Precision Oncology Summit. Current Oncology, 31(8), 4519-4530. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31080337