Abstract 234P
Background
The literature reports that a minority of women with epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) are referred for germline BRCA testing despite implications for treatment and cancer prevention. Mainstream testing is BRCA testing undertaken by the Medical Oncology service, rather than clinical genetics; and it was introduced at Auckland Hospital in 2017. This study assessed whether the implementation of mainstreaming increased the uptake and timeliness of BRCA testing in a multi-cultural tertiary centre.
Methods
A retrospective analysis of women with high grade non-mucinous EOC attending Medical Oncology clinic was performed prior to and after the introduction of mainstream testing. Eligibility for BRCA testing included those with the above diagnosis ≤ 70 years (tested by Medical Oncology after mainstreaming introduced) and patients > 70 years with a personal and/or relevant family history (tested by genetics). The primary outcome was the proportion of eligible patients who underwent BRCA testing. A secondary outcome was the time to the availability of the BRCA test result.
Results
The proportion of eligible women tested for germline BRCA mutations significantly increased (Table). The improvement was due to increased testing via mainstreaming; there was no change in the proportion of women tested through the Genetics service. Efficiency of testing also improved; the median time from Genetics referral to an available BRCA result was 146 days (range 37 to 1599 days) and from Medical Oncology assessment to BRCA test result 64 days (range 34 to 471 days) before and after mainstreaming respectively. Overall, 14.9% of women had germline BRCA 1 or 2 mutations.
Table: 234P
Pre- mainstreaming | Post- mainstreaming | P value | |
---|---|---|---|
Eligible for mainstreaming* | 108/177 (61.0%) | 37/40 (92.5%) | 0.0001 |
>70 years + personal/ family history** | 10/15 (66.7%) | 7/9 (77.8%) | 0.6687 |
Overall | 118/192 (61.5%) | 44/49 (89.8%) | 0.0001 |
Pre-mainstreaming, patients tested by Genetics; post-mainstreaming, tested in Medical Oncology clinic.
**Tested by Genetics.
Conclusions
Mainstream testing for germline BRCA mutations improved quality – access and timeliness – for women with EOC. Efficiency of testing will have important therapeutic implications.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Auckland District Health Board.
Funding
Auckland District Health Board.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
133P - Prognostic and predictive factors from the phase III CELESTIAL trial of cabozantinib (C) versus placebo (P) in previously treated advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (aHCC)
Presenter: Thomas Yau
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
134P - Identification, development and validation of a circulating miRNA-based diagnostic signature for early detection of gastric cancer
Presenter: Daisuke Izumi
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
135P - The promising key genes associated with tumour microenvironment and prognosis of hepatocellular carcinoma
Presenter: Jing Fang
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
136P - Helicobacter pylori-positive gastric diffuse large B-cell lymphoma: A subset with distinct prognostic features
Presenter: Yuan Cheng
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
137P - Significant benefit of pyrotinib combined with SHR6390 in patients with multiline-resistant HER2-positive advanced gastric cancer
Presenter: Zuhua Chen
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
138P - Incidence of supracarinal lymph node positivity in operated cases of total esophagectomy: Short term results from a tertiary cancer centre
Presenter: Akhil Palod
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
139P - Prognostic usefulness of advanced lung cancer inflammation index in locally-advanced pancreatic carcinoma patients treated with radical chemoradiotherapy
Presenter: Ayberk Besen
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
140P - Pancreaticoduodenectomy versus combined neoadjuvant chemotherapy and pancreaticoduodenectomy: Survival patterns among patients with stage II & III periampullary carcinoma
Presenter: Mai Abdelkader
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
141P - A 13-gene signature of DNA repair predicts prognosis in gastric cancer patients
Presenter: Jinjia Chang
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
142P - Relation between Interleukin -4 (590C/T) gene polymorphism and hepatocellular carcinoma risk in HBV and HCV patients
Presenter: Suzy Gohar
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract