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Dermatology Times
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The 40-gene expression profile (40-GEP) test can focus treatment options and optimize patient outcomes, according to a poster presentation at the 2022 Fall Clinical Dermatology Conference.
The 40-gene expression profile (40-GEP) test can focus treatment options and optimize patient outcomes for high-risk cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), according to a poster presentation at the 2022 Fall Clinical Dermatology Conference in Las Vegas, Nevada.1 Investigators of the study sought to determine how patient management decisions are impacted by Mohs surgeons' use of the 40-GEP test, and how the test can improve patient outcomes.
Current members of the American College of Mohs Surgery (ACMS) participated in an anonymous survey. The study consisted of demographic questions, familiarity with and use of National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines, American Joint Committee on Cancer-8 staging, Brigham and Women's Hospital Tumor staging, and the 40-GEP.
Participants (n=39) were given background on the validation of the 40-GEP test, then evaluated the use of risk factors for the assessment of SCC patients within their practice and which were concerning enough to require the 40-GEP test. Participants were presented with a high-risk SCC patient vignette and asked for their risk assessment and treatment approaches pre- and post-40-GEP results.
Researchers determined that study participants' use of the 40-GEP test aligned with the NCCN’s very high and high-risk factors. When the Mohs surgeons were presented with a clinicopathologic risk factor of a depth <6mm or invasion beyond subcutaneous fat (NCCN ranking 5), 79% of study participants chose to utilize 40-GEP. Additionally, when presented with a clinicopathologic risk factor of tumor cells within the nerve sheath of a nerve lying deeper than the dermis (NCCN ranking 5), 72% of study participants chose to utilize 40-GEP.
Study results demonstrated that “42% of Mohs surgeons reported increased confidence in management decision with 40-GEP testing.”
To conclude the study:
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