From diagnosis of colorectal cancer to diagnosis of Lynch syndrome: The RM Partners quality improvement project

Author:

Monje‐Garcia Laura1ORCID,Bill Timothy2,Farthing Lindsay2,Hill Nate2,Kipps Emma2,Brady Angela F.3,Kemp Zoe4,Snape Katie5,Myers Alistair6,Abulafi Muti7ORCID,Monahan Kevin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. St Mark's Hospital Centre for Familial Intestinal Cancer Imperial College London London UK

2. RM Partners West London Cancer Alliance London UK

3. North West Thames Regional Genetics Service London UK

4. The Royal Marsden Hospital Cancer Genetics Unit London UK

5. South West Thames Centre for Genomics London UK

6. Hillingdon Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust London UK

7. Croydon University Hospital London UK

Abstract

AbstractAimThe UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guideline DG27 recommends universal testing for Lynch syndrome (LS) in all newly diagnosed colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. However, DG27 guideline implementation varies significantly by geography. This quality improvement project (QIP) was developed to measure variation and deliver an effective diagnostic pathway from diagnosis of CRC to diagnosis of LS within the RM Partners (RMP) West London cancer alliance.MethodRM Partners includes a population of 4 million people and incorporates nine CRC multidisciplinary teams (MDTs), overseen by a Pathway Group, and three regional genetic services, managing approximately 1500 new CRC cases annually. A responsible LS champion was nominated within each MDT. A regional project manager and nurse practitioner were appointed to support the LS champions, to develop online training packages and patient consultation workshops. MDTs were supported to develop an ‘in‐house’ mainstreaming service to offer genetic testing in their routine oncology clinics. Baseline data were collected through completion of the LS pathway audit of the testing pathway in 30 consecutive CRC patients from each CRC MDT, with measurement of each step of the testing pathway. Areas for improvement in each MDT were identified, delivered by the local champion and supported by the project team.ResultsOverall, QIP measurables improved following the intervention. The Wilcoxon signed rank test revealed significant differences with strong effect sizes on the percentile of CRC cases undergoing mismatch repair (MMR) testing in endoscopic biopsies (p = 0.008), further testing with either methylation or BRAF V600E (p = 0/03) and in effective referral for genetic testing (from 10% to 74%; p = 0.02). During the QIP new mainstreaming services were developed, alongside the implementation of systematic and robust testing pathways. These pathways were tailored to the needs of each CRC team to ensure that patients with a diagnosis of CRC had access to testing for LS. Online training packages were produced which remain freely accessible for CRC teams across the UK.ConclusionThe LS project was completed by April 2022. We have implemented a systematic approach with workforce transformation to facilitate identification and ‘mainstreamed’ genetic diagnosis of LS. This work has contributed to the development of a National LS Transformation Project in England which recommends local leadership within cancer teams to ensure delivery of diagnosis of LS and integration of genomics into clinical practice.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Gastroenterology

Reference17 articles.

1. Lynch syndrome quality improvement project.RM Partners West London Cancer Alliance.2020; Available from:https://rmpartners.nhs.uk/our‐work/improving‐diagnostic‐treatment‐pathways/lynch‐syndrome‐quality‐improvement‐project/. Accessed 21 Apr 2023.

2. NHS England.Implementing Lynch syndrome testing and surveillance pathways.2023; Available from:https://www.england.nhs.uk/wp‐content/uploads/2021/07/B0622‐implementing‐lynch‐syndrome‐testing‐and‐surveillance‐pathways‐may‐2023.pdf. Accessed 21 Apr 2023.

3. ‘It's time to test’ campaign material from Bowel Cancer UK. Available from:https://www.bowelcanceruk.org.uk/campaigning/support‐our‐campaigns/time‐to‐test/. Accessed 21 Apr 2023.

4. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.Molecular testing strategies for Lynch syndrome in people with colorectal cancer. diagnostics guidance [DG27]. Available from:https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/dg27. Accessed 21 Apr 2023.

5. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.NICE technology appraisal guidance [TA709]. Pembrolizumab for untreated metastatic colorectal cancer with high microsatellite instability or mismatch repair deficiency.2021; Available from:https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ta709. Accessed 13 May 2023.

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