Table 3.
Enabling conditions for state-of-the-art delivery of genome-based testing.
Issue | Goal | Description of Good Practice | Policy Example | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Infrastructure | ||||
Creating communities of practice and healthcare system networks | Inequitable care delivery |
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The Australian Genomics Health Alliance, for example, is an attempt to accelerate and evaluate the application of genomic testing in healthcare. It is a “collaborative research partnership across more than 80 diagnostic laboratories, clinical genetics services, and research and academic institutions” [7]. |
Resource planning | Care interruptions, wait times or unsustainable care |
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The US Government Accountability Office conducted a study forecasting a future shortfall of genetic counsellors and medical geneticists in general, and by geographic region [8]. |
Informatics | Uncoordinated or duplicative care, inconsistent test development, poor information for evaluation |
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|
The UK Department of Health & Social Care committed “£4 billion over a five-year period (2016-21) in digital technology, systems and infrastructure, to provide the health and care system with the digital capability and capacity it needs ….” [9]. |
Operations | ||||
Entry/exit point for innovation | Technology creep and poorly performing legacy technology |
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|
NHS England, has announced its decision to revisit tests annually, and considering the co-ordinated replacement of older tests with new and emerging approaches, including considering where evidence still needs to be collected to validate the benefit of moving to [whole-genome sequencing], and identifying where alternative genomic diagnostics, such as gene panels or microarrays, will continue to be needed [9]. |
Evaluative Function | Avoid low value care |
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An evaluative framework for genetic testing developed for the US Department of Defense recognized the practical need to triage adoption decisions based level on urgency through the use of rapid review and real-world evaluation of new tests [11]. |
Service models | Inequitable and inefficient care |
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NHS England Genomic Laboratory Hubs [12] and US Department of Veteran’s Affairs dedicated service centres for testing [13]. |
Awareness and care navigation | Confusion or lack of information regarding test availability |
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In France, where testing is more variable across regions, lists of different laboratory sites with contact information are provided [14]. |
Healthcare Environment | ||||
Integration of Innovation and Healthcare Delivery | Care lagging behind pace of care innovation and scientific advances |
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UK and Australian private-public-sector partnerships [15,16]. In Ontario, Canada, reflex testing for newly diagnosed cases of NSCLC (adenocarcinoma/non-squamous) uses a panel consisting of established and investigational biomarkers [17] |
Financing approach | Care interruptions, wait times or unsustainable care |
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The US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) have attempted to incentivize molecular diagnostic innovation by enabling manufacturer-set free pricing for FDA-cleared or approved tests under certain conditions [18]. |
Education and Training | Inappropriate care; medical error; care lagging behind pace of care innovation |
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The Genomics Education Programme (GEP) in England plans to develop “genomic competencies for specialty training”, human resource planning, and providing supports for “curricula development and medical revalidatio” [9]. |
Regulation | Substandard care , negligence and legal liability |
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Regulation is typically addressed through accreditation processes that conform with the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) including ISO 15189 Medical Laboratories. Examples include regulation of clinical genetic testing through CLIA in the US and Canada | |
Data privacy and security | Inappropriate identification of patients and family members |
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The Global Alliance for Genomics & Health, has created a Framework and “Core Elements for Responsible Data Sharing” [22]. |