Abstract

e23242 Background: Cancer patients receiving non-endocrine anti-cancer therapies are at risk of hepatitis B virus (HBV) reactivation (HBVr). Medical society guidelines recommend HBV screening prior to treatment, but real-world uptake is slow and variable. The Ottawa Hospital Cancer Centre implemented a screening pilot program for all patients receiving FOLFOX based regimens or FOLFOXIRI between January and April 2023 which included incorporating HBV screening tests into treatment plan builds and specifying pharmacy and nursing pre-treatment checks. Methods: Charts were retrospectively reviewed, and patient and disease characteristics were collected. The primary endpoint was to identify the proportion of patients who underwent screening prior to treatment start. Univariate analyses assessed the association between baseline characteristics and failure to screen. We also reviewed quality metrics including time from consult to testing, time to result, number of duplicate screens, and treatment delays due to testing. Results: Baseline demographics of the 42 patients included can be found in Table 1. 32 patients (76.2%) completed screening and 5 (15.6%) had a positive screen. The majority of patients screened (78.1%) completed screening prior to first treatment as intended, however 38.1% were drawn on day of treatment. 9.52% of patients had duplicate screening inadvertently. All patients who tested positive were referred to Infectious Diseases. Of those, 1 received antivirals for chronic HBV, and 4 had resolved HBV and were recommended for monitoring. There were no treatment delays due to pending screening and no HBVr. Receipt of prior systemic therapy was significantly associated with failure to screen (55% vs 95%, OR 17.1 (95% CI 1.92-153), p = 0.011). Factors including age, sex, primary disease site, therapy intent, and regimen received were not significantly associated with screening completion or HBV positivity. Conclusions: The results of this pilot highlights the importance of building HBV screening into standardized treatment plans and engaging all team members to ensure high levels of screening. Prior systemic therapy receipt was associated with failure to screen, and thus programs should include education on the necessity of screening as recommended by medical guidelines. The prevalence of HBV in this population may also be higher than previously expected, which should be explored in future research. [Table: see text]

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