• Am J Manag Care · Jan 2013

    Closing the personalized medicine information gap: HER2 test documentation practice.

    • Ilia L Ferrusi, Craig C Earle, Maureen Trudeau, Natasha B Leighl, Eleanor Pullenayegum, Hoa Khong, Jeffrey S Hoch, and Deborah A Marshall.
    • Centre for Evaluation of Medicines, St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
    • Am J Manag Care. 2013 Jan 1; 19 (1): 838844838-44.

    BackgroundUncertainty about human epidermal growth factor receptor-2 (HER2) testing practice in Canada continues to hinder efforts to improve personalized medicine. Pathologists routinely perform HER2 assessment for all tumors > 1 cm, and pathology is reported centrally to the provincial cancer registry.ObjectivesTo understand patterns of HER2 test documentation for early-stage breast cancer (BC) patients in Ontario's centralized pathology reporting system.Study DesignRetrospective cohort study of central HER2 test documentation in early-stage BC patients diagnosed in 2006-2007.MethodsCohort and staging information was derived from cancer registry and admissions data. Linkage across administrative databases provided data on surgical and radiologic treatment, sociodemographic factors, diagnosis setting, and comorbidities. Pathology reports from the provincial cancer registry were reviewed for HER2 testing, hormone receptor, and grade. Unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios were calculated to determine factors related to HER2 documentation.ResultsA HER2 test was documented for 66% of 13,396 patients. HER2 documentation was associated with stage, hormone receptor, and tumor grade documentation. Higher stage and grade at diagnosis were also associated with HER2 documentation. All models suggested variable regional documentation patterns. Documentation did not differ by sociodemographic factors, presence of comorbidities, or surgical procedure.ConclusionsDespite a universal testing policy, the rate of centralized HER2 test documentation was lower than expected and related to disease severity. Differences in regional reporting likely reflect ascertainment bias inherent to centralized pathology reporting rather than testing access. Improved HER2 reporting is encouraged for cancer registration, quality-of-care measurement, and program evaluation.

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