Early detection of cancer can dramatically increase the efficacy of curative treatment. Unfortunately, early screening tests exist for only a small number of cancers, meaning most are not diagnosed until symptoms arise in the later stages of the disease.
Better cancer screening is, therefore, a major focus area for clinical performance improvement. Marilyn Sherrill talks with Dr. Joe Cummings about a new genomic test that can theoretically screen for more than 50 different types of cancer using a small blood sample, and what the future may hold for this technology.
Guest speaker:
Joe Cummings, PhD
Technology Program Director
Vizient
Moderator:
Marilyn Sherrill, RN, MBA
Performance Improvement Program Director
Vizient
Show Notes:
[01:28] The Grail Galleri liquid biopsy test.
[02:18] Sampling methodology.
[02:55] The analytic process of the Grail Galleri test, and some developmental history.
[04:01] Testing methodology is based on methylation patterns.
[05:36] Results of the clinical studies to-date, and status of ongoing studies.
[08:13] Early adopters include some larger healthcare systems and, potentially, anyone willing to self-pay.
[09:04] Test costs and preliminary cost/benefit anaylsis.
[11:02] Considerations re: payers’ willingness to cover test costs.
[12:09] Looking forward to trial results and potential FDA approval.
[13:05] With many companies doing R&D in the liquid biospy field, the development of competing and complementary tests is to be expected.
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