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Published in: Digestive Diseases and Sciences 10/2016

01-10-2016 | Original Article

Universal Versus Targeted Screening for Lynch Syndrome: Comparing Ascertainment and Costs Based on Clinical Experience

Authors: Mujde Z. Erten, Luca P. Fernandez, Hank K. Ng, Wendy C. McKinnon, Brandie Heald, Christopher J. Koliba, Marc S. Greenblatt

Published in: Digestive Diseases and Sciences | Issue 10/2016

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Abstract

Background

Strategies to screen colorectal cancers (CRCs) for Lynch syndrome are evolving rapidly; the optimal strategy remains uncertain.

Aim

We compared targeted versus universal screening of CRCs for Lynch syndrome.

Methods

In 2010–2011, we employed targeted screening (age < 60 and/or Bethesda criteria). From 2012 to 2014, we screened all CRCs. Immunohistochemistry for the four mismatch repair proteins was done in all cases, followed by other diagnostic studies as indicated. We modeled the diagnostic costs of detecting Lynch syndrome and estimated the 5-year costs of preventing CRC by colonoscopy screening, using a system dynamics model.

Results

Using targeted screening, 51/175 (29 %) cancers fit criteria and were tested by immunohistochemistry; 15/51 (29 %, or 8.6 % of all CRCs) showed suspicious loss of ≥1 mismatch repair protein. Germline mismatch repair gene mutations were found in 4/4 cases sequenced (11 suspected cases did not have germline testing). Using universal screening, 17/292 (5.8 %) screened cancers had abnormal immunohistochemistry suspicious for Lynch syndrome. Germline mismatch repair mutations were found in only 3/10 cases sequenced (7 suspected cases did not have germline testing). The mean cost to identify Lynch syndrome probands was ~$23,333/case for targeted screening and ~$175,916/case for universal screening at our institution. Estimated costs to identify and screen probands and relatives were: targeted, $9798/case and universal, $38,452/case.

Conclusions

In real-world Lynch syndrome management, incomplete clinical follow-up was the major barrier to do genetic testing. Targeted screening costs 2- to 7.5-fold less than universal and rarely misses Lynch syndrome cases. Future changes in testing costs will likely change the optimal algorithm.
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Metadata
Title
Universal Versus Targeted Screening for Lynch Syndrome: Comparing Ascertainment and Costs Based on Clinical Experience
Authors
Mujde Z. Erten
Luca P. Fernandez
Hank K. Ng
Wendy C. McKinnon
Brandie Heald
Christopher J. Koliba
Marc S. Greenblatt
Publication date
01-10-2016
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Digestive Diseases and Sciences / Issue 10/2016
Print ISSN: 0163-2116
Electronic ISSN: 1573-2568
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10620-016-4218-y

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