Litcius/Paper detail

Reflex ROS1 IHC Screening with FISH Confirmation for Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer—A Cost-Efficient Strategy in a Public Healthcare System

Maisam Makarem, Doreen A. Ezeife, Adam C. Smith, Janice J.N. Li, Jennifer Law, Ming‐Sound Tsao, Natasha B. Leighl

2021Current Oncology16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ROS1 rearrangements are identified in 1–2% of lung adenocarcinoma cases, and reflex testing is guideline-recommended. We developed a decision model for population-based ROS1 testing from a Canadian public healthcare perspective to determine the strategy that optimized detection of true-positive (TP) cases while minimizing costs and turnaround time (TAT). Eight diagnostic strategies were compared, including reflex single gene testing via immunohistochemistry (IHC) screening, fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH), next-generation sequencing (NGS), and biomarker-informed (EGFR/ALK/KRAS wildtype) testing initiated by pathologists and clinician-initiated strategies. Reflex IHC screening with FISH confirmation of positive cases yielded the best results for TAT, TP detection rate, and cost. IHC screening saved CAD 1,000,000 versus reflex FISH testing. NGS was the costliest reflex strategy. Biomarker-informed testing was cost-efficient but delayed TAT. Clinician-initiated testing was the least costly but resulted in long TAT and missed TP cases, highlighting the importance of reflex testing. Thus, reflex IHC screening for ROS1 with FISH confirmation provides a cost-efficient strategy with short TAT and maximizes the number of TP cases detected.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineReflexKRASBiomarkerLung cancerGuidelineFluorescence in situ hybridizationROS1CancerPopulationOncologyInternal medicinePathologyAdenocarcinomaBiologyGeneChromosomeBiochemistryColorectal cancerEnvironmental healthCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsLung Cancer Treatments and MutationsRNA modifications and cancer