From the Journals

Single screening for Lynch syndrome beats sequential tests in CRC


 

FROM JAMA ONCOLOGY

Physicians could more accurately test patients with colon cancer for Lynch syndrome by using a single tumor sequencing test instead of the current protocol of up to six sequential tests, a new study suggests. The process may also be faster in some cases.

“We found that up-front tumor testing is actually more sensitive and more specific for detecting Lynch syndrome than the old, multiple-test model,” study coauthor Rachel Pearlman, MS, a genetic counselor at Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, said in an interview. “Tumor sequencing resulted in a 10% improvement in Lynch syndrome detection rates while also providing important information about treatment options for the patients.”

©Gio_tto/Thinkstock.com

According to Ms. Pearlman, screening for Lynch syndrome is recommended for all patients with colon cancer and can require multiple sequential tests. It affects an estimated 3% of these patients, putting them at higher risk of several kinds of cancers including endometrial, ovarian, and gastric.

“Identifying the condition at the time of diagnosis can potentially impact treatment options and also help to facilitate intensive surveillance for other types of cancer,” Ms. Pearlman said. “In addition, we’ll know that the patients’ family members are at risk and will benefit from genetic counseling and testing.”

However, “traditional sequential testing is complex and confusing to patients and clinicians and occurs over a prolonged period, incurring risk for loss to follow-up,” the investigators wrote in JAMA Oncology.

For the new study, the researchers sought to confirm whether tumor sequencing, a form of genetic testing, would be faster and more accurate than the current sequential testing approach.

In a multicenter study, they prospectively tested tumor DNA in 2015 and 2016. They also tested another 46 patients who had been previously confirmed to have Lynch syndrome.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Opioids linked to mortality in IBD
MDedge Internal Medicine
AGA Clinical Practice Update: Incorporating psychological care in the management of chronic digestive diseases
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Organ-sparing resection techniques should be way of the future
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: It is an exciting time in obesity treatment
MDedge Internal Medicine
Step-up diet: Less-intensive way to ID eosinophilic esophagitis food triggers?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Medical treatment of perianal fistulae often warranted, despite limited evidence
MDedge Internal Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Is kratom the answer to the opioid crisis?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Survival worse with alcohol-related HCC, compared with other types
MDedge Internal Medicine
Sessile serrated colon polyps may be detectable noninvasively
MDedge Internal Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Why low-calorie sucralose may fuel weight gain
MDedge Internal Medicine