ESMO Open (Apr 2019)

Prospective analysis of 895 patients on a UK Genomics Review Board

  • David Allan Moore,
  • Marina Kushnir,
  • Gabriel Mak,
  • Helen Winter,
  • Teresa Curiel,
  • Mark Voskoboynik,
  • Michele Moschetta,
  • Nataliya Rozumna-Martynyuk,
  • Kevin Balbi,
  • Philip Bennett,
  • Martin Forster,
  • Anjana Kulkarni,
  • Debra Haynes,
  • Charles Swanton,
  • Hendrik-Tobias Arkenau

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/esmoopen-2018-000469
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2

Abstract

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Background The increasing frequency and complexity of cancer genomic profiling represents a challenge for the oncology community. Results from next-generation sequencing–based clinical tests require expert review to determine their clinical relevance and to ensure patients are stratified appropriately to established therapies or clinical trials.Methods The Sarah Cannon Research Institute UK/UCL Genomics Review Board (GRB) was established in 2014 and represents a multidisciplinary team with expertise in molecular oncology, clinical trials, clinical cancer genetics and molecular pathology. Prospective data from this board were collated.Results To date, 895 patients have been reviewed by the GRB, of whom 180 (20%) were referred for clinical trial screening and 62 (7%) received trial therapy. For a further 106, a clinical trial recommendation was given.Conclusions Numerous challenges are faced in implementing a GRB, including the identification of potential germline variants, the interpretation of variants of uncertain significance and consideration of the technical limitations of pathology material when interpreting results. These challenges are likely to be encountered with increasing frequency in routine practice. This GRB experience provides a model for the multidisciplinary review of molecular profiling data and for the linking of molecular analysis to clinical trial networks.