Cancer screening with multicancer detection tests: A translational science review

Author:

Rubinstein Wendy S.1ORCID,Patriotis Christos1ORCID,Dickherber Anthony2ORCID,Han Paul K. J.3ORCID,Katki Hormuzd A.4ORCID,LeeVan Elyse1ORCID,Pinsky Paul F.1ORCID,Prorok Philip C.1ORCID,Skarlupka Amanda L.1ORCID,Temkin Sarah M.5ORCID,Castle Philip E.14ORCID,Minasian Lori M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cancer Prevention US National Cancer Institute Rockville Maryland USA

2. Center for Strategic Scientific Initiatives US National Cancer Institute Rockville Maryland USA

3. Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences US National Cancer Institute Rockville Maryland USA

4. Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics US National Cancer Institute Rockville Maryland USA

5. National Institutes of Health Office of Research on Women's Health Bethesda Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractMulticancer detection (MCD) tests use a single, easily obtainable biospecimen, such as blood, to screen for more than one cancer concurrently. MCD tests can potentially be used to improve early cancer detection, including cancers that currently lack effective screening methods. However, these tests have unknown and unquantified benefits and harms. MCD tests differ from conventional cancer screening tests in that the organ responsible for a positive test is unknown, and a broad diagnostic workup may be necessary to confirm the location and type of underlying cancer. Among two prospective studies involving greater than 16,000 individuals, MCD tests identified those who had some cancers without currently recommended screening tests, including pancreas, ovary, liver, uterus, small intestine, oropharyngeal, bone, thyroid, and hematologic malignancies, at early stages. Reported MCD test sensitivities range from 27% to 95% but differ by organ and are lower for early stage cancers, for which treatment toxicity would be lowest and the potential for cure might be highest. False reassurance from a negative MCD result may reduce screening adherence, risking a loss in proven public health benefits from standard‐of‐care screening. Prospective clinical trials are needed to address uncertainties about MCD accuracy to detect different cancers in asymptomatic individuals, whether these tests can detect cancer sufficiently early for effective treatment and mortality reduction, the degree to which these tests may contribute to cancer overdiagnosis and overtreatment, whether MCD tests work equally well across all populations, and the appropriate diagnostic evaluation and follow‐up for patients with a positive test.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference106 articles.

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