Department of General Medical Oncology, Leuven Cancer Institute, Leuven, Belgium.
Oncol Res Treat. 2016;39(12):811-816. doi: 10.1159/000453057. Epub 2016 Nov 18.
Genetic analysis of tissue derived from patients with advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) is not uniformly applied on a national and international level, even though mutational data can provide clinically relevant prognostic and predictive information, especially in patients qualifying for treatment with expensive targeted agents.
The current article describes the rationale for genetic testing of GIST tissue, looks at financial implications associated with such analysis and speculates on potential cost savings introduced by routine mutational testing and tailored use of tyrosine kinase inhibitors based on genotyping. This work is based on a hypothetical analysis of epidemiological data, drug costs, reimbursement criteria and market research figures.
The cost burden for routine genotyping of important genes in GISTs, especially in patients at high risk for relapse after primary surgery and in advanced, inoperable metastatic disease, is relatively low. The early identification of GISTs with primary resistance mutations should be the basis for personalized GIST treatment and reimbursement of drugs. As illustrated by Belgian figures, the exclusive use of a drug such as imatinib in patients who are likely to benefit from the agent based on genetic information can lead to significant cost savings, which outweigh the costs for testing.
Mutational analysis of GIST should be considered early in all patients at risk for relapse after curative surgery and in the case of advanced, inoperable, metastatic disease. The costs for the actual genotyping should not be used as an argument against profiling of the tumor. The adjuvant and palliative systemic treatment of GISTs should be personalized based on the genotype and other known prognostic and predictive factors. Reimbursement criteria for essential agents such as imatinib should be adapted accordingly.
即使突变数据可以提供具有临床相关性的预后和预测信息,尤其是在符合昂贵的靶向药物治疗条件的患者中,来自晚期胃肠道间质瘤(GIST)患者的组织的基因分析也没有在国家和国际层面上得到统一应用。
本文描述了对 GIST 组织进行基因检测的基本原理,研究了与这种分析相关的财务影响,并推测通过常规突变检测和基于基因分型的酪氨酸激酶抑制剂的定制使用,引入潜在的成本节约。这项工作基于对流行病学数据、药物成本、报销标准和市场研究数据的假设性分析。
对 GIST 中重要基因进行常规基因分型的成本负担相对较低,特别是对于原发性手术后复发风险高的患者以及晚期不可手术转移性疾病的患者。早期识别原发性耐药突变的 GIST 应该是基于个体化 GIST 治疗和药物报销的基础。正如比利时的数字所示,在基于遗传信息极有可能受益于药物的患者中,排他性使用药物(如伊马替尼)可带来显著的成本节约,超过了检测成本。
在所有有治愈性手术后复发风险的患者中,以及在晚期不可手术、转移性疾病的情况下,都应考虑对 GIST 进行突变分析。实际基因分型的成本不应成为反对肿瘤分析的理由。GIST 的辅助和姑息性全身治疗应基于基因型和其他已知的预后和预测因素进行个体化。伊马替尼等基本药物的报销标准应相应调整。