4.4 Article

Costs of Next-Generation Sequencing Assays in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: A Micro-Costing Study

Journal

CURRENT ONCOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 8, Pages 5238-5246

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/curroncol29080416

Keywords

next-generation sequencing; fine needle aspirates; non-small lung cancer; micro-costing

Categories

Funding

  1. Government of Canada through Genome Canada
  2. Ontario Genomics Institute
  3. Ontario Genomics Institute [OGI-122]
  4. Genome Canada

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We conducted a micro-costing study to determine the costs of four NGS assays for NSCLC diagnostics. The Trusight Tumor 170 Kit was found to be the most expensive, but further economic evaluation is needed to determine the most cost-effective NGS assay.
Background: Next-generation sequencing (NGS) of tumor genomes has changed and improved cancer treatment over the past few decades. It can inform clinicians on the optimal therapeutic approach in many of the solid and hematologic cancers, including non-small lung cancer (NSCLC). Our study aimed to determine the costs of NGS assays for NSCLC diagnostics. Methods: We performed a micro-costing study of four NGS assays (Trusight Tumor 170 Kit (Illumina), Oncomine Focus (Thermo Fisher), QIAseq Targeted DNA Custom Panel and QIASeq Targeted RNAscan Custom Panel (Qiagen), and KAPA HyperPlus/SeqCap EZ (Roche)) at the StemCore Laboratories, the Ottawa Hospital, Canada. We used a time-and-motion approach to measure personnel time and a pre-defined questionnaire to collect resource utilization. The unit costs were based on market prices. The cost data were reported in 2019 Canadian dollars. Results: Based on a case throughput of 500 cases per year, the per-sample cost for TruSight Tumor 170 Kit, QIASeq Targeted DNA Custom Panel and QIASeq Targeted RNAscan Custom Panel, Oncomine Focus, and HyperPlus/SeqCap EZ were CAD 1778, CAD 599, CAD 1100 and CAD 1270, respectively. The key cost drivers were library preparation (34-60%) and sequencing (31-51%), followed by data analysis (6-13%) and administrative support (2-7%). Conclusions: Trusight Tumor 170 Kit was the most expensive NGS assay for NSCLC diagnostics; however, an economic evaluation is required to identify the most cost-effective NGS assay. Our study results could help inform decisions to select a robust platform for NSCLC diagnostics from fine needle aspirates, and future economic evaluations of the NGS platforms to guide treatment selections for NSCLC patients.

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