Improving Delivery of Genetic Services to High Risk Childhood Cancer Survivors: A Randomized Study of Remote Genetic Services Versus Usual Care

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $694,312 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Germline cancer genetic testing has become a standard evidence-based practice, with risk reduction and cancer screening guidelines for genetic carriers. Yet, many at-risk patients do not have access to genetic services, leaving many genetic carriers unidentified. Given increasing precision medicine applications, and a limited and geographically restricted workforce of genetic providers, innovative delivery models for genetic services that are responsive to the needs of geographically and sociodemographically diverse patient populations in their local health care systems are needed. Suboptimal access to genetic services is an acute problem for childhood cancer survivors, who have high rates of subsequent malignant neoplasms (SMN). Studies indicate that >10% of survivors carry a pathogenic or likely pathogenic germline mutation in cancer susceptibility genes (eg. TP53, BRCA ½). In order to identify high-risk survivors for early surveillance and intervention, NCCN and Children's Oncology Group Guidelines recommend that survivors with a personal and/or family history of cancer be referred for genetic services. However, <15% of these survivors have access to genetic counseling services and both survivors and their Primary Care Providers (PCPs) are largely unaware of their health risks and thus, adherence to high-risk surveillance guidelines is low. Our studies in adult patients with a personal or family history of cancer suggest that remote telegenetic services (by phone or videoconferencing) may increase access to genetic services and identification of genetic mutation carriers. Yet, our current studies have examined these models partnering on-site with community oncology practices, limiting scalability. This is of particular importance for childhood cancer survivors, who are widely distributed nationally and >85% are receiving their care with PCPs. Thus, our premise is that our adapted in-home, collaborative PCP model of remote telegenetic services can provide a scalable model that will result in increased uptake of evidence-based recommendations for cancer genetic services in survivors. We propose a 3-arm randomized Hybrid 1 effectiveness and implementation study in the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study (CCSS) to evaluate the effectiveness of our in-home, collaborative PCP model of remote telegenetic services to increase uptake of cancer genetic testing in childhood cancer survivors compared to usual care (Aim 1), to evaluate the effectiveness of videoconferencing to provide greater increase in knowledge, and decrease in distress and depression as compared to remote phone services (Aim 2a), the moderators of patient outcomes (Aim 2b), and a cost evaluation of the three study arms (Aim 2c). Also, we will conduct a multi-stakeholder mixed-methods implementation evaluation to understand patient, provider and system factors associated with uptake of our remote telegenetic services model, facilitators and barriers to uptake, and recommenda...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10212342
Project number
5R01CA237369-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
Principal Investigator
Angela R. Bradbury
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$694,312
Award type
5
Project period
2020-07-08 → 2025-06-30