Concordance in Molecular Tumor Board Case Reviews in the ASCO TAPUR Study

Author:

Perez Jacqueline K.1ORCID,Kleber Jeanene1,Rothe Michael1,Mangat Pam1ORCID,Garrett-Mayer Elizabeth1ORCID,Schilsky Richard L.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. American Society of Clinical Oncology, Alexandria, VA

Abstract

PURPOSE With the advent of precision medicine, molecular tumor boards (MTBs) were established to interpret genomic results and guide decision making for targeted therapy in oncology patients. There are currently no universal guidelines for how MTBs should operate and thus variance can be seen depending on which MTB is reviewing the case. This study assesses the concordance of MTB recommendations when a participant case is reviewed by two different MTBs, establishes potential reasons for discordance, and advocates for the establishment of standard MTB operating guidelines. PATIENTS AND METHODS Participants with advanced cancer, who had exhausted all standard treatment options were screened for the Targeted Agent and Profiling Utilization Registry (TAPUR) Study. Cases were submitted for MTB review if the treatment proposal was outside the protocol genomic matching rules, or if multiple treatment options were identified. Of the 306 cases submitted for review by the TAPUR MTB from 2016 to 2018, 107 were randomly selected for secondary review by a different MTB group. Recommendations from the original review were not disclosed. Concordance between MTB group recommendations was assessed. Concordance was defined as agreement between MTB reviews on the genomic alteration and study drug match proposed by the clinical site. Thematic qualitative analysis was conducted for the discordant cases to assess reasons for discordance. RESULTS Complete or partial concordance was observed in 79% of cases (95% CI, 70 to 86; one-sided P = .25). Most discordant analyses were due to disagreements on the strength of evidence regarding efficacy of the proposed treatment (32%). CONCLUSION When presented with identical participant cases, different MTB review groups make the same or similar treatment recommendations approximately 80% of the time.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

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