“You’re talking about people living longer and living better if they get access to the testing and the treatment,” said Roberts, now a head and neck cancer specialist at the Mass General Cancer Center.
Although not every cancer patient will benefit from sequencing, it’s a good idea for each patient to ask about it, Roberts said, so their doctor can consider whether it might benefit them.
But despite the guidelines and the common use of these approaches at major medical centers, many American cancer patients aren’t getting screened and are missing out, he and others said.
Less than half of patients who qualify end up getting their tumors sequenced, according to a 2021 study.
A study published Monday and presented this weekend at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting in Chicago shows that just 7% of patients who meet criteria to have their own genes sequenced actually do.
Sequencing would help determine if they should receive a drug shown to prolong disease-free survival in those with certain genetic mutations. “If you never get tested and you never got that drug, you missed that opportunity,” said Dr. Allison Kurian, a professor at Stanford University and an oncologist at the Stanford Cancer Institute, who helped lead the research.
President Biden has launched a “cancer moonshot” aiming to develop new tools to dramatically reduce cancer deaths.
“It’s one thing to invent a very cool new (treatment),” Kurian said. “But if you can’t get it out there, it really doesn’t matter.”