• 2 months ago
Genetic factors play a role in as much as 10% of all cases of breast and ovarian cancer. And yet, according to a new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, there is a significant number of patients who are not aware that they carry genetic risk factors for these diseases. Joseph Grzymski, the Chief Genomics Officer for Renown Health--which helped spearhead the study--spoke to ForbesWomen editor Maggie McGrath about these research findings and what they mean for doctors and patients across the U.S.

0:00 Statistics On Breast Cancer
0:40 What Genetic Screening Found In The US Population
4:01 Recommendations For Individuals And Institutors
5:58 Is Cost A Barrier To Breast Cancer Screenings
8:43 How JAMA Is Helping
13:03 What's Next?

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Transcript
00:00Hi everyone, I'm Maggie McGrath, editor of Forbes Women.
00:06According to the American Cancer Society, one in eight women in the United States will
00:10develop breast cancer.
00:12One in 36 will die from the disease.
00:15Other research shows that up to 10% of breast and ovarian cancer cases are caused by genetics,
00:23and yet new research shows that genetic screening is not reaching the patients who need it the
00:29most.
00:30Joining us now to explain this research is Joe Jimski.
00:34He's the director of genomics at Renown Health, and he was deeply involved in this research.
00:39Joe, thanks so much for being here.
00:41Start at the beginning.
00:42What made you want to do this research?
00:45Was it a patient experience you had?
00:48Was it a story that you heard?
00:50Or was it prior research that led to this article now coming out in JAMA?
00:55Sure.
00:56So like many people, I had to deal with cancer in my family and was actually a researcher
01:09in biophysics.
01:11And after my father passed away when I was age 27, I felt like my research should have
01:21more of a human health focus and was fortunate enough to start this project in northern Nevada
01:28called the Healthy Nevada Project, whose aim is to assess the impact of genetic screening
01:36on individuals in our population.
01:39And that's what led to a series of studies on links to breast cancer.
01:49So this new study that came out, there was a figure in it.
01:52I was reading just the parts that I could understand as someone without a medical license,
01:57but there's evidence that suggests that up to 80% of patients with a pathogenic or likely
02:03pathogenic variant of the BRCA gene are unaware of their condition.
02:10Can you talk about, in layman's terms, what does this mean?
02:14And also in layman's terms, broadly, what did you find in this research?
02:17Sure.
02:19So if we take a step back, in 2018, when we launched the Healthy Nevada Project, genetic
02:24screening of the general population was not common.
02:28There are a few studies happening around the United States, then there are many more now.
02:32And the reason for that is we found that when we screened the general population, so all
02:40comers, as we call it in research, anybody welcome to join who's an adult, we found that
02:45approximately 8 out of 10 individuals who had one of these pathogenic or likely pathogenic
02:52variants, not only didn't know it, but they didn't meet the screening criteria in common
02:59medical practice to raise a red flag to say, we should screen this individual.
03:05And that was, at the time, surprising.
03:10It still is.
03:11It is a finding that has been validated by other health systems around the country.
03:18And it really speaks to the importance of raising awareness for risks for hereditary
03:23breast and ovarian cancer, many of which, of course, travel through families and stories,
03:30right?
03:31Grandma had breast cancer.
03:32My father had colon cancer.
03:35But when 8 out of 10 individuals do not know those risks, or their doctors do not see them
03:42as high-risk individuals, and we're finding them with 30-year disease acceleration for
03:49the underlying disease, it's really important to change the narrative on the importance
03:55of screening and the importance of genetics in the general population.
04:02As you talk about this figure and you talk about folks who are not meeting the screening
04:07criteria and also the awareness of screening, it strikes me that we might be talking to
04:13two populations here.
04:15There's the individual population telling people to go to their doctor and get screened.
04:19But also, if people are not meeting the screening criteria that their doctor is providing them,
04:24how much of this is on the GP population of the world?
04:28The primary care physicians who are talking to their patients, are they unaware of the
04:32screening criteria?
04:33And is that why patients are unaware that they should perhaps be getting this genetic
04:37screening?
04:38Yeah, that's a great question, Maggie.
04:41So the primary care doctors are becoming more versed in the power of screening.
04:51And I think within the next few years, we're going to see genetic screening for these relatively
04:58prevalent pathogenic variants that cause disease.
05:03We're going to see it become much more common in the primary care practice.
05:10Throughout our journey working with the health system, we've had to consistently spend a
05:18lot of time working with primary care doctors, basically about not being afraid of using
05:25genetics for screening tools, much like they wouldn't be afraid to use a cholesterol panel
05:31or check someone's blood sugar.
05:34And that just requires changing the narrative on the complexity of screening, using clinicians
05:44who are more versed to help guide primary care docs to feel more comfortable about it,
05:50and also just to increase knowledge more broadly, much like I hope we're doing today.
05:58There was a 2016 study in the Journal of Oncology that looked at racial disparities in BRCA
06:04testing.
06:05And this is important because we know that Black women have a 41% higher death rate from
06:11breast cancer than their white counterparts.
06:13But this 2016 study asked some of the participants about costs in some of these screenings.
06:20So did your research look at the cost of some of this genetic testing and how patients
06:24feel about them?
06:25Because I think if someone thinks that an extra test is going to cost them a lot of
06:29money, they might not take it.
06:31And I kind of understand why.
06:34Of course, and it asks questions about the broader complexities of navigating the United
06:42States health care system.
06:46Equality is a real thing in the delivery of care.
06:51Care is inequitable across the United States, for sure.
06:55And we've also shown that in this recent JAMA Network paper on familial screening, where
07:03even just the assessment of family risk is not equally distributed across racial and
07:12ethnic groups.
07:13And that's obviously problematic.
07:16So what can we do?
07:18Well, in our case in northern Nevada, we've partnered with federally qualified health
07:24centers which deliver care across socioeconomic divides.
07:33And we offer our genetic screening at no cost.
07:38And that is not, unfortunately, practical across the entire United States.
07:44Who's going to pay for it?
07:45In this case, it's a research study.
07:47There are both research and clinical goals.
07:50We're really lucky to have a health system that supports us and feels like this is the
07:56right thing to do.
07:59In the future, we are going to need to assess whether or not current screening, mammography
08:07starting at age 40, ending at 74 every other year, is the most effective and most cost-effective
08:14tool, and also the most equitable tool, versus something like offering screening for these
08:20BRCA genes.
08:22And then we are going to have to re-educate the population on how these costs are going
08:31to be covered and whether or not they should participate, given, of course, there are also
08:38ethical and personal concerns about the use of genetic testing.
08:43You said something interesting just about the family history.
08:46So I'm wondering, are doctors of America not taking a complete family history?
08:51And does this go back to the training?
08:52Do America's medical schools and residencies need to change what they're teaching our young
08:59doctors about what they're asking patients in all populations?
09:03Yeah.
09:05So in our study, we both use a seven-question questionnaire.
09:13Seven questions seems like anybody should be able to fill it out, right?
09:17It's not exhausting.
09:18They're very easy, right?
09:19Did anybody in your family have breast cancer, you know, is one of the questions.
09:25There's a really detailed family history, which we found gets buried, you know, deep
09:30in the notes.
09:32And so, you know, if I look at my notebook from meetings, I typically focus on the first
09:37page and I never really go to the last page.
09:41And the notes of many patients deep in their notes are family history, and it's not surfaced
09:47and available for the primary care doc to, again, say, ding, ding, ding, there's a problem
09:53here.
09:54So we looked at the power of just seven questions.
09:57It's called the FHS-7 questionnaire.
10:00I can provide a link to it.
10:01Really easy.
10:03And what we found was that those questions actually predict really well whether or not
10:11a woman is going to have a BRCA mutation.
10:14But we also found that those questions, when answered positively, increase the risk of
10:20breast cancer.
10:21Not surprisingly.
10:22It often runs in families.
10:25And is not readily available to the primary care doctor to say, this is something you
10:31should think about, perhaps offer this individual genetic screening.
10:38And it starts with individuals who are, screening rates are higher for individuals that are
10:47socioeconomically well off.
10:49Screening rates are lower for racial and ethnic minorities.
10:56And we need to, frankly, improve that.
10:58I think one of the points of this study is to not be afraid of implementing a very simple
11:05questionnaire because if you can do it consistently with everybody, you're going to increase outcomes
11:13for things like breast cancer survival rates.
11:15And that's obviously a huge goal across the United States.
11:18Now, of course, this seven-question survey sounds like something that providers can give.
11:23But do you have any recommendations for patients themselves?
11:27And perhaps they are in a healthcare desert.
11:29Perhaps they are in a disadvantaged community where they struggle to get treatment.
11:34Is there a question they should ask themselves and then take to their doctor the next time
11:37they happen to see one?
11:40Absolutely.
11:42Like I said, I would like to provide the link to the questions.
11:46Certainly, it's really difficult to impose on individuals what is the best thing to tell
11:55your doctor about your entire family history and your own concerns as an individual.
12:06Like I said at the beginning, I had to deal with a father who was very young and had cancer.
12:12And so, you know, I'm hyper aware.
12:15Folks who are living out in the rural communities of Nevada are perhaps less aware.
12:20And so, you know, a simple message is if you think you have a family history risk of disease,
12:27family history is still unfortunately the best tool we have for assessing risk.
12:35And I would ask people to, you know, indicate that to their doctor.
12:41Again, I want to, you know, I think we need to answer that question cautiously to, you
12:47know, put so much on individuals' plates about, you know, what they should be doing.
12:52But yes, the, you know, the phrase you have to be your own best advocate still unfortunately
13:00holds true.
13:02Family history is the best assessment.
13:03Joe, what's next for you?
13:05Is there another research study or are you moving into implementation?
13:09If we were to speak a year from now, what would you hope to tell Forbes about what you
13:13have accomplished as a result of this research?
13:17That's a great question.
13:18So, yes, we will continue research into, you know, what are the best tools to assess risk
13:25across the population for cancers, for heart disease, et cetera.
13:29That's a real goal of the Healthy Nevada Project.
13:32But of course, you know, it becomes imperative to actually convert this into action.
13:42And so, again, you know, I'm lucky enough to work with the health system in northern
13:47Nevada that is extremely progressive.
13:50For example, we're building a new breast risk center thanks to generous donors in the community,
13:59the Conrads.
14:01And one of the reasons that's being built is because Nevada really is at the bottom
14:07of outcomes for women as it relates to breast and ovarian cancer.
14:13So putting these tools like the FHS-7 questionnaire that will soon be sent to every person in
14:21our health system rather than just asked by the doctor is something we're going to do.
14:27And then what we can do scientifically is we can say, okay, did this method work better
14:33than that method, report on it in the literature, and then hope that our colleagues across the
14:40United States adopt our best practices based on the evidence.
14:44The evidence is really what should drive the decision-making in healthcare.
14:49Evidence should drive decision-making in healthcare.
14:52That is worth underscoring.
14:53Joe Ginski, thank you so much for joining us to talk about this very important research.
14:58We so appreciate your time and your work.
15:01Thanks for bringing attention to it, Maggie.

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