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Clinical Molecular Marker Testing Data Capture to Promote Precision Medicine Research Within the Cancer Research Network

Authors :
Sarah Knerr
Andrea N. Burnett-Hartman
Julie Lynch
Natalia Udaltsova
Monica Ter-Minassian
Lawrence H. Kushi
Douglas A. Corley
Jessica Ezzell Hunter
Mara M. Epstein
Christine Y. Lu
Heather Spencer Feigelson
Stacey Honda
Christine Neslund-Dudas
Pamala A. Pawloski
Alanna Kulchak Rahm
David Tabano
Source :
JCO clinical cancer informatics. 3
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

PURPOSE To evaluate health care systems for the availability of population-level data on the frequency of use and results of clinical molecular marker tests to inform precision cancer care. METHODS We assessed cancer-related molecular marker test data availability across 12 US health care systems in the Cancer Research Network. Overall, these systems provide care to a diverse population of more than 12 million people in the United States. We performed qualitative analyses of test data availability for five blood-based protein, nine germline, and 14 tissue-based tumor marker tests in each health care system’s electronic health record and tumor registry using key informants, test code lists, and manual review of data types and output. We then performed quantitative analyses to estimate the proportion of patients with cancer with test utilization data and results for specific molecular marker tests. RESULTS Health systems were able to systematically capture population-level data on all five blood protein markers, six of 14 tissue-based tumor markers, and none of the nine germline markers. Successful, systematic data capture was achievable for tests with electronic data feeds for test results (blood protein markers) or through prior manual abstraction by tumor registrars (select tumor-based markers). For test results stored in scanned image files (particularly germline and tumor marker tests), information on which test was performed and test results was not readily accessible in an electronic format. CONCLUSION Even in health care systems with sophisticated electronic health records, there were few codified data elements available for evaluating precision cancer medicine test use and results at the population level. Health care organizations should establish standards for electronic reporting of precision medicine tests to expedite cancer research and facilitate the implementation of precision medicine approaches.

Details

ISSN :
24734276
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JCO clinical cancer informatics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4302e59091f31fd32c0c27c6aad05c16