Northeast Georgia Medical Center, Gainesville, GA
Aditya Kumar Ghosh , Sheena Bhushan , Oluseyi Abidoye , Devi Sampat
Background: Patients with mutations in BRCA 1/2 genes are at increased risk for pancreatic ductal cell adenocarcinoma (PDAC) in addition to breast and ovarian cancer. In 2019, the NCCN updated its guidelines recommending gene testing for all patients with PDAC to include associated genes: ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, CDKN2A, MSH2, MLH1, MSH6, EPCAM, PALB2, STK11, TP53. This retrospective, observational study reports on adherence to genetic screening recommendations among patients with newly diagnosed PDAC who received oncologic care in rural Northeast Georgia (NEGA). Methods: Chart abstraction was performed utilizing the EPIC database from hospital electronic medical records of patients who were diagnosed with PDAC between 1/1/20-12/31/21 and received oncologic care in rural NE GA. This abstraction was completed to include information on gene testing recommendations, testing completion, and time from diagnosis to testing. The deidentified dataset was then analyzed using appropriate descriptive and associative statistical testing. Results: Of the cohort of 109 patients diagnosed with PDAC over these two years, only 32 (29.4%) received recommendations and completed genetic screening. Among this segment of patients, 16 (14.7%) were screened within 10 days of diagnosis, 8 (7.3%) within 11-30 days, and 6 (5.5%) were screened over 30 days after being diagnosed with PDAC. Among the 77 (70.6%) patients who did not receive screening, 45 of them (41.3%) did not receive any discussion regarding screening despite planning for other standard of care treatment. The remaining 32 patients (29.4% of the no screening cohort) did not receive screening due to desire to pursue palliative care/hospice/or due to terminal illness that prevented further workup. Of the 45 patients who did not receive screening despite PDAC treatment intent, majority (43; 95.5%) did not receive recommendations regarding the importance of genetic screening. Gene testing of the 32 patients who had screening completed showed that 4 (12.5%) had a pathogenic mutation (3 with CFTR; 1 ATM) and 16 (50%) had variants of unknown significance (VUS). Conclusions: This study highlights a gap in adherence to guideline-directed genetic testing in PDAC patients. Notable findings include increased likelihood to complete the test when recommendations and discussions of genetic screening occurred early in the course after initial diagnosis of PDAC. Moreover, 12.5% of those screened were found to have pathogenic mutation and half were found to have at least one VUS suggesting that genetic screening may potentially identify causative mutations. The findings also highlight the consideration for gene testing recommendation for the large proportion of patients who are terminally ill at diagnosis, as genetic screening would potentially benefit the family members and inform that they receive genetic screening as well.
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