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Precision medicine navigators increase genomic testing rates in Black cancer patients – study

New research shows that precision medicine navigators can play a key role in helping increase genomic testing rates among Black patients with prostate cancer. 

The presence of a clinical navigator to act as a liaison between people with prostate cancer and the healthcare system, greatly increases the likelihood that Black patients will receive advanced testing to help predict the severity of their disease and guide treatment, a new study suggests.

The study showed patients seen by a precision medicine navigator were substantially more likely to receive genomic testing than those who were not. Black patients, whose genomic testing rates traditionally are much lower than white patients, experienced a six-fold increase if they were seen by a navigator. 

Racial disparity in prostate cancer 

Research shows Black patients are 76 per cent more likely to be diagnosed with prostate cancer than white patients and 120 per cent more likely to die from it. 

This disparity stems from many factors, including lower rates of early prostate cancer screening that result in more aggressive cancers by the time Black patients are diagnosed.

Lead study author Dr Alexander J Allen, a radiation oncology resident physician at the University of Maryland Medical Center in Baltimore, explained: “Black patients with prostate cancer in the U.S. have disparately worse clinical outcomes compared to other racial groups.

“Our findings suggest hiring a precision medicine navigator who specialises in genetic testing can improve the rates of Black patients receiving these tests, which could potentially reduce health disparities and improve outcomes.”

Genomic testing

Genomic testing is used to gauge the likelihood that a cancer will metastasise, or spread beyond the prostate, within the next five to 10 years.

Research presented at American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) 2021 Annual Meeting suggested genomic testing may be better at predicting the risk for metastases than conventional prostate cancer tests, such as the Gleason score and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels. 

Dr Allen said oncologists use the results of all three tests to guide treatment decisions.

“Genomic testing provides additional information that can alter a patient’s treatment plan,” he said. 

“For example, if Gleason scores and PSA levels suggest a patient has an intermediate risk for metastases, but the genetic analysis categorises them at high risk because of the biological makeup of the tumour, then you might intensify treatment.”

The role of precision medicine navigators 

Precision medicine navigators are people whose job is focused entirely on identifying patients eligible for genomic testing and then making sure the tests are completed.

After working with health care providers to identify which patients are eligible, the navigator helps the patient fill out requisition forms and coordinates the submission of biopsy tissue samples to the appropriate genomic testing company.

In this study, researchers compared how frequently patients with prostate cancer in a large health care system received genetic testing from the seven months prior to the arrival of a precision medicine navigator (PMN) to the seven months following the creation of that position. 

Of the 693 patients studied, 44.9 per cent were treated prior to the arrival of the PMN and 55.1 per cent were treated after the PMN began work. The median age in both groups was 68 years, and racial distributions were similar (60 per cent white, 35.1 per cent and 34 per cent Black, 3.2 per cent and 3.7 per cent Asian/Pacific Islander and 1.3 per cent and 2.1 per cent Latino). There were no significant differences between the two groups in disease severity, type of insurance coverage or type of facility in which they were treated.

Black patients seen by the PMN were six times more likely to receive testing than those not seen by a PMN. Following the arrival of the PMN, the proportion of Black patients referred for genomic testing rose from 19 per cent to 58 per cent.

Genomic testing rates also rose for lower-income patients, those on Medicare and Medicaid and people who were being treated at community hospitals after the introduction of the PMN.

“We thought there would be some increase but did not expect the testing rates to grow so substantially,” Dr Allen said. 

“The most common way treatments were altered based on genomic testing results was in whether or not patients with intermediate risk disease were given hormone blocking therapy [in which hormones are suppressed to stop them from fuelling cancer cell growth].”.

The next step for Dr Allen’s team is to design a study that investigates whether the increased rates of genomic testing ultimately lead to better patient outcomes. 

“We theorise that if patients are treated differently based on this new genome-based risk stratification, outcomes will improve,” he said.

But making sure genomic testing is available to all patients who might benefit will be key to helping lessen racial disparities in prostate cancer going forward.

Precision medicine navigators are not funded through traditional business models, suggesting that novel funding mechanisms may need to be initiated to decrease disparities.

“As precision medicine becomes more mainstream, it has the potential to alleviate disparities,” he added. 

“But if there are no measures taken to ensure access to these tools, we could just be maintaining or even worsening the health inequities that we have today.”

The findings of the study were presented at the ASTRO Annual Meeting 2023.

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