4.7 Article

Clinical Practice Patterns and Cost Effectiveness of Human Epidermal Growth Receptor 2 Testing Strategies in Breast Cancer Patients

Journal

CANCER
Volume 115, Issue 22, Pages 5166-5174

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.24574

Keywords

personalized medicine; targeted therapies; genomics; HER2; trastuzumab; breast cancer; utilization; cost effectiveness; clinical practice patterns

Categories

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [R01CA101849, P01CA130818]
  2. Blue Shield Foundation of California

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BACKGROUND: Testing technologies are increasingly used to target cancer therapies. Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) testing to target trastuzumab for patients with breast cancer provides insights into the evidence needed for emerging testing technologies. METHODS: The authors reviewed literature on HER2 test utilization and cost effectiveness of HER2 testing for patients with breast cancer. They examined available evidence on: percentage of eligible patients tested for HER2; test methods used; concordance of test results between community and central/reference laboratories; use of trastuzumab by HER2 test result; and cost effectiveness of testing strategies. RESULTS: Little evidence was available to determine whether all eligible patients are tested, how many are retested to confirm results, and how many with negative HER2 test results still receive trastuzumab. Studies suggested that up to 66% of eligible patients had no documentation of testing in claims records, up to 20% of patients receiving trastuzumab were not tested or had no documentation of a positive test, and 20% of HER2 results may be incorrect. Few cost-effectiveness analyses of trastuzumab explicitly considered the economic implications of various testing strategies. CONCLUSIONS: There was little information about the actual use of HER2 testing in clinical practice, but evidence suggested important variations in testing practices and key gaps in knowledge exist. Given the increasing use of targeted therapies, it is critical to build an evidence base that supports informed decision making on emerging testing technologies in cancer care. Cancer 2009;115:5166-74. (C) 2009 American Cancer Society.

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