Abstract

431 Background: Nearly 60% of patients with non-small cell lung cancer will have actionable mutations identified via molecular testing. Of these patients, those treated with targeted therapy had longer overall survival than those who did not. Therefore, it is imperative molecular testing is both sent and resulted at time of first treatment. Despite this, multiple barriers remain with reported community rates of <50% with comprehensive molecular testing. We sought to understand testing practices at our institution. Methods: In this retrospective chart review, patients with stage IV, non-small cell, non-squamous cell lung cancer treated at Orlando Regional Medical Center between 1/2021-5/31/2022 were identified. Primary endpoints included rate of comprehensive molecular testing (EGFR, ALK, ROS1, RET, MET, BRAF, KRAS, ErbB2 and NTRK, either tissue or plasma) available prior to first line treatment. Results: Of the 73 patients who were included, 69 patients (94.8%) had comprehensive molecular testing results available prior to first line treatment. 48 (65.8%) patients had tissue testing results prior to first treatment. 44 (60.2%) patients had plasma testing results prior to first treatment. 14 (19.2%) patients had tissue testing sent, without results at time of first treatment. Conclusions: The comprehensive molecular testing rate at a large tertiary hospital is 94.8%, substantially higher than the rates reported in the literature. Despite this, 19.2% of patients had tissue testing sent but not resulted at time of first treatment. Future studies are needed to improve turnaround time of tissue based molecular testing results and evaluate concurrent versus sequential tissue and plasma testing.

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