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ACCC Precision Medicine: Transforming Complex to Clear

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Precision Medicine

Precision medicine delivers personalized cancer care based on an individual’s genomics, lifestyle, and environment. Precision medicine implements the use of biomarkers, molecular testing, and targeted therapies to tailor treatment plans that address the unique needs of every patient.

Helping to bring personalized cancer care into focus, ACCC transforms complex science into clear and actionable education that brings clarity to patient care decisions. From essential knowledge on cancer screening updates to clinically impactful biomarker testing and new cancer diagnostic assay development, the ACCC Precision Medicine Library has fundamental resources that match the professional needs and preferred learning styles of the multidisciplinary cancer team.

Cancer Diagnostics

ACCC develops targeted educational resources and programs that help multidisciplinary cancer care teams stay up to date on the latest advancements in cancer diagnostics. This includes resources on subjects including biomarkers, measurable residual disease (MRD) testing, multi-cancer early detection, and pathology.

Care Coordination

ACCC offers a variety of educational and practical resources to help community programs achieve a more coordinated care experience for their patients. This includes projects and resources on eliminating disparities in precision medicine, genetic counseling, and precision medicine stewardship.

Treatment

ACCC provides members with the latest information, resources, and programs so they can better assist their patients with critical care decisions. This includes programs on managing adverse events, usage of biosimilars in treatment, bispecific antibodies, and immunotherapy.

On-Demand Webinars

  • Now available is a 30-minute eCourse for members of the multidisciplinary cancer care team on how to use consistent, evidence-based health literacy best practices as it relates to lung cancer biomarker testing. Complete “Health Literacy Best Practices for Lung Cancer Biomarkers” to gain a lexicon of health terminology that resonates with patients and their caregivers and access downloadable resources about health literacy and biomarkers.

  • Hear patient advocacy professionals discuss the impact of using patient-centered vocabulary during precision medicine conversations.

  • This webinar will highlight how community cancer programs are using a new approach to optimize biomarker testing processes through the addition of a precision medicine steward. Precision medicine experts will outline strategies and key metrics that demonstrate how precision medicine stewardship can improve coordination and streamline workflows to ensure timely, equitable testing for patients who may benefit from targeted therapy.

  • This webinar will review how the steps in the life cycle of a patient specimen can affect its molecular integrity and molecular analysis results. Our expert speaker will define the roles of stewardship across the specimen chain of custody, discuss common factors that compromise specimen fitness for molecular testing, and describe solutions to improve preanalytics and tissue stewardship.

  • Two thought leaders who have deep knowledge of—and experience in—biomarker testing in patients with hematologic malignancies will discuss best practices for biomarker testing in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and multiple myeloma based on patient case discussions and the latest guidelines.

Cancer Buzz Podcasts

From the ACCCBuzz Blog

Barriers to Liquid Biopsy


October 14, 2021
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Liquid biopsy, a genetic test that can eliminate some of the most serious potential drawbacks of traditional tissue biopsy, is gaining more traction in cancer care. But there remain significant barriers to its widespread use.  

What Is a Liquid Biopsy? 

An essential element of cancer care, tumor tissue biopsies can confirm a cancer diagnosis, identify the cell type of a tumor, and determine whether a patient’s tumor contains specific genetic alterations that may make them candidates for targeted therapies. However, tumor tissue biopsies require invasive procedures (including surgery), and some patients may not be candidates due to poor health or a tumor’s specific location in the body.  

To overcome these barriers, researchers have developed technologies for capturing and analyzing DNA and other types of genetic material released by patients’ tumor cells into their blood. The removal of blood or other bodily fluids to detect cancerous cells or cancerous DNA is called liquid biopsy. Liquid biopsies have the benefit of being non-invasive, which means they can be done more frequently to better track tumors and mutations over time. They may also be used to validate the efficacy of a cancer treatment or monitor patients for potential relapse. And they can be a less costly alternative to the genomic analysis of tissue biopsies.

On June 1, 2016, the Food and Drug Administration approved the first liquid biopsy test for use in cancer. The test detects key mutations that make patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer candidates for treatment with the targeted therapy erlotinib (Tarceva®). The FDA previously approved this test for this indication using tumor specimens; the new approval is for the detection of the same mutation using blood samples. 

But barriers to using biomarker testing are common. Respondents to ACCC’s Trending Now in Cancer Care survey indicate that insufficient insurance coverage, reimbursement, and protocols are among the issues working against the widespread implementation of biomarker testing in oncology practices. Accordingly, the adoption of biomarker testing has been slow.

A study presented at the 2021 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting found that of nearly 3,500 patients with advanced NSCLC, 90% had been given at least one biomarker test. However, only 46% of these patients had been given all five of the biomarker tests commonly used for NSCLC. There is also evidence of significant disparities in the use of biomarker testing among different racial groups. Another study presented at the same ASCO meeting revealed that 39% of Black patients with metastatic NSCLC underwent next-generation sequencing, compared to 50% of their White counterparts.

Cost & Coverage Barriers 

The process of paying for expensive molecular tests and for the expertise of the multiple professionals required to interpret test results and formulate treatment plans is inconsistent and complex. This is especially the case with newer technologies such as liquid biopsy, which can come with higher price tags. Physicians, pathologists, and patients often do not know the costs of molecular testing services until they are reimbursed or billed. The confusion that results is distressing for both patients and providers.  

Payers also structure their policies for biomarker coverage in multiple ways, making them difficult to understand. While some reimburse for many types of tests, others reimburse for only the most basic tests, or for tests for very specific clinical conditions and genes. This wide variation often increases the challenge of assessing and tracking numerous coverage policies.

To learn more about the status of liquid biopsies in community cancer centers, listen to the ACCC CANCER BUZZ podcast, What You Need to Know About Liquid Biopsy. There, J. Nicholas Bodor, MD, PhD, MPH—assistant professor in the Department of Hematology/Oncology at Fox Chase Cancer Center—and Kathryn A. Phillips, PhD—professor of health economics and health services research and director of the Center for Translational and Policy Research on Personalized Medicine at the University of California San Francisco—address the feasibility of offering liquid biopsies in community cancer centers and the pros and cons of doing so.

Additional ACCC resources:

 

 

News & Media

From Oncology Issues

Digital Tools

Biomarker Lexicon
Explore the many terms associated with the different areas and applications of cancer biomarkers.

Biomarker Resource Library
Search this resource bank of nationally available materials relevant to cancer biomarkers and biomarker testing. You may filter by cancer type, area of application, and/or primary audience.

Biomarker Toolkit
This practical toolkit is centered around the four key elements needed to develop a precision medicine program that successfully incorporates biomarker testing.

MRD Testing Implementation Roadmap
Navigate how to lay the groundwork for MRD testing, prepare your care team, implement testing, and evaluate ongoing progress.

MRD Testing Resource Library
Curated materials to help establish and implement MRD testing for your patients with adult B-cell ALL.

Biomarker Testing Implementation Roadmap for Advanced NSCLC
An innovative tool to implement, expand, and sustain biomarker testing for patients with advanced NSCLC.

Biomarker Testing Resource Library
Curated materials to support the implementation of biomarker testing for patients with advanced NSCLC.

Bispecific Antibodies Resources
Links to recent scholarship and resources that can help practices better serve their patients who may be eligible for TRBA therapy.

Abstracts & Presentations