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Impact of Immunoscore on the Management of Stage II Colon Cancer Patients: A Physician Survey

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Selection of appropriate stage II colon cancer patients for adjuvant chemotherapy (AC) is controversial. A novel immune response classifier has previously been validated to refine patient selection, but its impact on oncologist treatment planning had yet to be described. In this surv...

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Autores principales: Kasi, Anup, Dotan, Efrat, Poage, Graham M., Catteau, Aurelie, Vernerey, Dewi, George, Manju, Barzi, Afsaneh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8582441/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34771628
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13215467
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author Kasi, Anup
Dotan, Efrat
Poage, Graham M.
Catteau, Aurelie
Vernerey, Dewi
George, Manju
Barzi, Afsaneh
author_facet Kasi, Anup
Dotan, Efrat
Poage, Graham M.
Catteau, Aurelie
Vernerey, Dewi
George, Manju
Barzi, Afsaneh
author_sort Kasi, Anup
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Selection of appropriate stage II colon cancer patients for adjuvant chemotherapy (AC) is controversial. A novel immune response classifier has previously been validated to refine patient selection, but its impact on oncologist treatment planning had yet to be described. In this survey, all but one oncologist altered clinical practice recommendations, and recommendations for AC prescriptions were reduced by half (among the Immunoscore-high cases (low recurrence risk)). This study revealed that the Immunoscore results could significantly decrease AC use in patients with stage II colon cancer who may not benefit from it, thereby reducing the administration of nonvalue care. ABSTRACT: Background: Adjuvant chemotherapy use in stage II colon cancer is controversial. Current prognostic risk factors do not take the tumor immune microenvironment into account. Consideration of the Immunoscore, which measures the host immune response at the tumor site, may assist clinicians in reducing adjuvant chemotherapy use in patients who are unlikely to benefit from it. This study sought to determine the potential clinical utility of the Immunoscore, via its effect on medical oncologists’ recommendations for management of patients with stage II colon cancer. Methods: De-identified vignettes of 10 patients with stage II colon cancer were presented to 25 practicing medical oncologists. Each participant completed surveys indicating recommendations for adjuvant chemotherapy and surveillance strategies. An educational session was subsequently conducted, and the same patient profiles were re-presented but included immunoscore results. Participants were again asked to provide their recommendations. A participant was counted as influenced if their responses were altered after immunoscore test results were provided. Results: All but one participant (96%) altered a management recommendation for ≥1 case. For individual cases, a mean of 55% (range, 40–80%) of participants altered their recommendations for adjuvant chemotherapy and/or surveillance. For the immunoscore-high cases (low-risk of recurrence), recommendations for adjuvant chemotherapy use decreased from 60% to 31%. Conclusions: These results indicate a willingness by oncologists to integrate immunoscore information into clinical practice recommendations. Incorporation of immunoscore data resulted in the reduction of nonvalue care in the simulated population. Confirmation in prospective studies is planned.
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spelling pubmed-85824412021-11-12 Impact of Immunoscore on the Management of Stage II Colon Cancer Patients: A Physician Survey Kasi, Anup Dotan, Efrat Poage, Graham M. Catteau, Aurelie Vernerey, Dewi George, Manju Barzi, Afsaneh Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Selection of appropriate stage II colon cancer patients for adjuvant chemotherapy (AC) is controversial. A novel immune response classifier has previously been validated to refine patient selection, but its impact on oncologist treatment planning had yet to be described. In this survey, all but one oncologist altered clinical practice recommendations, and recommendations for AC prescriptions were reduced by half (among the Immunoscore-high cases (low recurrence risk)). This study revealed that the Immunoscore results could significantly decrease AC use in patients with stage II colon cancer who may not benefit from it, thereby reducing the administration of nonvalue care. ABSTRACT: Background: Adjuvant chemotherapy use in stage II colon cancer is controversial. Current prognostic risk factors do not take the tumor immune microenvironment into account. Consideration of the Immunoscore, which measures the host immune response at the tumor site, may assist clinicians in reducing adjuvant chemotherapy use in patients who are unlikely to benefit from it. This study sought to determine the potential clinical utility of the Immunoscore, via its effect on medical oncologists’ recommendations for management of patients with stage II colon cancer. Methods: De-identified vignettes of 10 patients with stage II colon cancer were presented to 25 practicing medical oncologists. Each participant completed surveys indicating recommendations for adjuvant chemotherapy and surveillance strategies. An educational session was subsequently conducted, and the same patient profiles were re-presented but included immunoscore results. Participants were again asked to provide their recommendations. A participant was counted as influenced if their responses were altered after immunoscore test results were provided. Results: All but one participant (96%) altered a management recommendation for ≥1 case. For individual cases, a mean of 55% (range, 40–80%) of participants altered their recommendations for adjuvant chemotherapy and/or surveillance. For the immunoscore-high cases (low-risk of recurrence), recommendations for adjuvant chemotherapy use decreased from 60% to 31%. Conclusions: These results indicate a willingness by oncologists to integrate immunoscore information into clinical practice recommendations. Incorporation of immunoscore data resulted in the reduction of nonvalue care in the simulated population. Confirmation in prospective studies is planned. MDPI 2021-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8582441/ /pubmed/34771628 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13215467 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kasi, Anup
Dotan, Efrat
Poage, Graham M.
Catteau, Aurelie
Vernerey, Dewi
George, Manju
Barzi, Afsaneh
Impact of Immunoscore on the Management of Stage II Colon Cancer Patients: A Physician Survey
title Impact of Immunoscore on the Management of Stage II Colon Cancer Patients: A Physician Survey
title_full Impact of Immunoscore on the Management of Stage II Colon Cancer Patients: A Physician Survey
title_fullStr Impact of Immunoscore on the Management of Stage II Colon Cancer Patients: A Physician Survey
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Immunoscore on the Management of Stage II Colon Cancer Patients: A Physician Survey
title_short Impact of Immunoscore on the Management of Stage II Colon Cancer Patients: A Physician Survey
title_sort impact of immunoscore on the management of stage ii colon cancer patients: a physician survey
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8582441/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34771628
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13215467
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