3.8 Article

Collaborative, Multidisciplinary Evaluation of Cancer Variants Through Virtual Molecular Tumor Boards Informs Local Clinical Practices

Journal

JCO CLINICAL CANCER INFORMATICS
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages 602-613

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1200/CCI.19.00169

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  2. National Cancer Institute (NCI) from the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) [P30 CA51008, U01 HG007437]
  3. NCI/NIH [U01CA209936, U24CA237719, R21CA220398]
  4. NHGRI of the NIH [R00HG007940]
  5. V Foundation for Cancer Research
  6. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2015-06290]
  7. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  8. Canada Research Chairs
  9. NHGRI [K99HG010157]

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PURPOSE The cancer research community is constantly evolving to better understand tumor biology, disease etiology, risk stratification, and pathways to novel treatments. Yet the clinical cancer genomics field has been hindered by redundant efforts to meaningfully collect and interpret disparate data types from multiple high-throughput modalities and integrate into clinical care processes. Bespoke data models, knowledgebases, and one-off customized resources for data analysis often lack adequate governance and quality control needed for these resources to be clinical grade. Many informatics efforts focused on genomic interpretation resources for neoplasms are underway to support data collection, deposition, curation, harmonization, integration, and analytics to support case review and treatment planning. METHODS In this review, we evaluate and summarize the landscape of available tools, resources, and evidence used in the evaluation of somatic and germline tumor variants within the context of molecular tumor boards. RESULTS Molecular tumor boards (MTBs) are collaborative efforts of multidisciplinary cancer experts equipped with genomic interpretation resources to aid in the delivery of accurate and timely clinical interpretations of complex genomic results for each patient, within an institution or hospital network. Virtual MTBs (VMTBs) provide an online forum for collaborative governance, provenance, and information sharing between experts outside a given hospital network with the potential to enhance MTB discussions. Knowledge sharing in VMTBs and communication with guideline-developing organizations can lead to progress evidenced by data harmonization across resources, crowd-sourced and expert-curated genomic assertions, and a more informed and explainable usage of artificial intelligence. CONCLUSION Advances in cancer genomics interpretation aid in better patient and disease classification, more streamlined identification of relevant literature, and a more thorough review of available treatments and predicted patient outcomes. (c) 2020 by American Society of Clinical Oncology

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