Implementing systematized patient-facing Lynch syndrome (LS) risk assessment in oncology using the electronic health record (EHR) system.

Authors

null

Chinedu Ukaegbu

Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA

Chinedu Ukaegbu , Matthew B. Yurgelun , Alyson Caruso , Leanne McAuliffe , Anu B. Chittenden , Sarah Whittaker , Jessica Cleveland , Brittany Black , Sunyi Zhang , Michael J. Hassett , Nadine Jackson McCleary , Sapna Syngal

Organizations

Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, Mass General Brigham, Boston, MA

Research Funding

No funding received

Background: Lynch syndrome (LS) is the most common inherited cause of colorectal (CRC) and endometrial cancers. Significant provider and institutional level barriers limit LS detection, even in oncology patients with LS-associated cancers. PREMM5 is a validated tool based on personal and family cancer history that is recommended by national professional societies for LS risk assessment. This project’s goal was to study the feasibility of patient-facing LS risk assessment using a PREMM5 screener embedded in an electronic health record (EHR) system, as a means of improving LS identification. Methods: The PREMM5LS screener intake questions were adapted to be completed by patients rather than healthcare providers. Screener adaptation and implementation involved iterative review by multidisciplinary experts and multilevel stakeholder engagement. The patient-facing PREMM5 LS screener was embedded in the EHR (Epic) at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI) to enable remote (via the EHR patient portal) and on-site completion (in clinic waiting rooms). All new gastrointestinal (GI) cancer patients seen at DFCI for initial oncology consultation from 6/2020-12/2021 were invited through the portal to complete the screener. PREMM5 scores ≥2.5% were considered “positive”, with genetics referral recommended. Beginning 2/2021, the EHR generated an automated provider-facing alert for positive screens. Results: 35% (1504/4262) of new GI cancer patients completed the screener. 367/1504 (24%) had a positive PREMM5 screen (mean age 53 years), of whom 66% were male, and 62%, 12% and 10% had CRC, neuroendocrine and pancreas cancer respectively. 97% (357/367) of screen positives completed the PREMM5 screener remotely through the portal. 102/367 (28%) received a genetics referral as a result of their positive PREMM5 screen (not including 75 genetics referrals outside this workflow), 13 of whom had a pathogenic variant (PV) on germline testing, including 4 with LS (MSH2, MSH6, PMS2), and others with PVs in ATM, BRCA2, CHEK2, NTHL1, RAD50 and RECQL4. Conclusions: A practice-wide patient-facing EHR-integrated PREMM5 risk assessment workflow is feasible and identified nearly 1 in 4 general GI oncology patients as warranting genetic evaluation, resulting in the identification of numerous actionable germline PVs. This method of deployment could make genetic risk assessment more accessible to non-genetics providers. The suboptimal screener completion rate and 28% genetics referral rate among positive screens suggest the need for additional refinements, including patient and provider engagement and outreach to positive screens who do not follow up with appointments for genetic evaluation.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2022 ASCO Annual Meeting

Session Type

Oral Abstract Session

Session Title

Prevention, Risk Reduction, and Hereditary Cancer

Track

Prevention, Risk Reduction, and Genetics

Sub Track

Hereditary Cancer Syndromes

Citation

J Clin Oncol 40, 2022 (suppl 16; abstr 10503)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2022.40.16_suppl.10503

Abstract #

10503

Abstract Disclosures

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