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EMERGING TECHNOLOGY AND LTCI

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Title: EMERGING TECHNOLOGY AND LTCI


1
EMERGING TECHNOLOGYAND LTCI
  • Session 16 February 27, 2006
  • Session Producer
  • Margaret Czellecz, HIA
  • LTCI Consultant

2
Panelists
  • Patricia Bomba, MD, FACP, Vice President and
    Medical Director, Geriatrics
  • MedAmerica
  • Gus Alva, MD, Medical Director, ATP Clinical
    Research, Associate Clinical Professor of
    Psychiatry, University of California Irvine

3
Emerging Technology and LTCIAdvances in Medical
Technology,Non-invasive Imaging, Biology,
Genomics
  • Patricia A. Bomba M.D., F.A.C.P.
  • Vice President and Medical Director, Geriatrics
  • Patricia.Bomba_at_lifethc.com

4
Objectives
  • Review examples of advances in medical technology
  • Describe clinical utility of current non-invasive
    imaging
  • Examine new genetic tests for specific diseases
  • Discuss genotypic analysis for drug metabolism

5
Advances in Medical Technology
  • Inflammatory Markers of Coronary Artery Disease
    Risk
  • High Sensitivity C-Reactive Protein
  • Lipoprotein-Associated Phospholipase A2
  • Biochemical Markers of Bone Turnover

6
Inflammatory Markers of Coronary Artery Disease
(CAD) Risk
  • High Sensitivity C-Reactive Protein (hs-CRP)
  • Nonspecific acute phase reactant produced by
    liver
  • Marker of inflammatory process
  • Studies suggest association of low-level chronic
    inflammation during atherogenesis
  • Enzyme linked immunoabsorbent assays (ELISA) and
    techniques using monoclonal antibodies detect
    lower levels of CRP

7
Inflammatory Markers of Coronary Artery Disease
(CAD) Risk
  • High Sensitivity C-Reactive Protein (hs-CRP)
  • Studies indicate correlation between hs-CRP
    levels and CAD
  • Primary prevention for individuals at
    intermediate risk (10-20) of heart disease over
    the next 10 years, based on standard, accepted
    risk stratification approaches
  • Cholesterol/LDL levels, diet, smoking, family and
    personal history
  • American Heart Association and Centers for
    Disease Control and Prevention, January 2003
  • Strong and independent marker for future heart
    events in these high-risk patients

8
Inflammatory Markers of Coronary Artery Disease
(CAD) Risk
  • Lipoprotein-Associated Phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA2)
  • Platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase
  • Enzyme that hydrolyzes phospholipids
  • Primarily associated with low-density
    lipoproteins
  • May have a proinflammatory role in progression of
    atherosclerosis
  • Two large-scale observational studies suggest
    Lp-PLA2 is an independent risk factor for CAD in
    men but no correlation with improved health
    outcomes
  • Not a component of National Cholesterol Education
    Program Adult Treatment Panel III guidelines

9
Biochemical Markers of Bone Turnover
  • Bone remodeling (or turnover)
  • Constant state of remodeling
  • Initial absorption of bone by osteoclasts
  • Deposition of new bone matrix by osteoblasts
  • Critical to overall bone growth
  • May reflect fracture risk still unclear
  • Current fracture risk based primarily on bone
    mineral density plus factors such as family
    history of osteoporosis, history of smoking, and
    weight
  • Assessed by measurement of surrogate markers of
    bone turnover in blood and urine
  • Sensitivity and specificity too low to be useful
    in identifying patient for treatment of
    osteoporosis

National Institutes of Health and Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality
10
Biochemical Markers of Bone Turnover
  • Formation Markers
  • Serum osteocalcin (OC)
  • Serum total alkaline phosphatase (ALP)
  • Serum bone specific alkaline phosphatase (BSAP)
  • Serum procollagen I carboxyterminal propeptide
    (PICP)
  • Serum procollagen type I N-terminal propeptide
    (PINP)
  • Bone sialoprotein

11
Biochemical Markers of Bone Turnover
  • Resorption Markers
  • Serum and urinary hydroxyproline (Hyp)
  • Urinary total pyridinoline (Pyr)
  • Urinary total deoxypyridinoline (dPyr)
  • Urinary free pyridinoline (f-Pyr or Pyrilink)
  • Urinary free deoxypyridinoline (f-dPyr or
    Pyrilink-D)
  • Urinary collagen type I cross-linked
    N-telopeptide A
  • (NTx or Osteomarks NTx test)
  • Urinary collagen type I cross-linked
    C-telopeptide
  • Serum carboxyterminal telopeptide or I collagen
    (ITCP)

12
Non-invasive Imaging
  • Non-invasive Imaging
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
  • Oncologic applications
  • Non-Oncologic applications
  • Spiral Computed Tomography (CT) for Lung Cancer
    Screening
  • Mammography Digital, Direct, Full-Field
  • Review of Indications
  • Medically appropriate indications
  • Peer-reviewed literature shows medically proven
    effectiveness
  • Investigational
  • Peer-reviewed literature does not show medically
    proven effectiveness

13
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
  • Diagnostic imaging modality that uses magnetic
    and radio frequency fields
  • Two-dimensional view and tomographic image of
    organ and surrounding tissues
  • Identify anatomic abnormalities
  • Provide information on the characteristics of the
    tissue

14
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
  • Configuration
  • Whole-body, circumferential MRI
  • Mid or high field strength magnet
  • Whole-body, open MRI
  • Low, mid or high field strength magnet
  • Dedicated extremity MRI
  • Low field strength magnet
  • Standing and sitting position MRI
  • Low field strength magnet
  • High field strength better quality image, less
    time
  • Low field adequate claustrophobic or obese
    patients, patients with metallic implants

15
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
  • Medically appropriate indications
  • head (brain), orbit, face, neck, spine, breast,
    cardiac, chest, extremities, abdomen, pelvis,
    temporomandibular joint, bone marrow blood supply
  • Investigational
  • Breast cancer screening in equivocal physical
    exam, mammography and ultrasound and high risk
    women other than those at genetic risk
  • Evaluation of coronary arteries
  • Evaluation of cardiomyopathy
  • Detecting and grading diffuse hepatic diseases
  • Extremity MRI of hip
  • Whole body/dedicated extremity MRI in evaluation
    of symptomatic Rheumatoid Arthritis

Peer-reviewed literature does not show medically
proven effectiveness
16
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
  • Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
  • Imaging technology can reveal both metabolic and
    anatomical information
  • Metabolic info distinguishes PET from MRI and CT
  • Measures concentrations of radioactive chemicals
    partially metabolized in the body region
  • Clinical value related to the ability to image
    the relative metabolic activity of target tissues
    and resolution associated with PET scanners
  • Multiple detectors in full or partial ring permit
    detection of photons emitted at 180o from one
    another
  • Variety of tracers used IV or inhaled

17
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
  • Molecular Coincidence Detection (MCD)
  • PET using a gamma camera
  • Imaging techniques in which SPECT gamma camera is
    used to detect photons emitted from decaying
    positrons associated with the metabolism of
    labeled fluoreodeoxyglucose (FDG)
  • metabolism related to glucose
  • Referred to as FDG-SPECT, metabolic SPECT,
    FDG-collimated SPECT or dual-head-coincidence or
    dual-head-coincidence (FDG-DHC-SPECT)

18
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
  • Oncologic Medically appropriate indications
  • Brain tumors radiation necrosis vs recurrence
  • Breast cancer restaging
  • Cervical cancer staging for invasive ca
  • Colorectal cancer metastases, resectability
  • Esophageal cancer post-chemo, resectability
  • Head and neck cancer staging, residual/recurrent
    ca
  • Lung cancer staging, restaging, solitary nodule
  • Unknown primary (occult primary tumor)

When conventional imaging techniques are
inconclusive
19
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
  • Oncologic Investigational
  • Breast neoplasms initial diagnosis and staging,
    evaluation response and surveillance
  • Cervical cancer primary diagnosis
  • Esophageal cancer primary diagnosis and staging
  • Gastric cancer detection, recurrence, monitoring
  • Melanoma regional metastases in candidates for
    sentinel biopsy
  • Ovarian cancer detection, recurrence, monitoring
  • Pancreatic cancer evaluation
  • Prostate cancer diagnosis, staging
  • Soft tissue sarcoma, testicular cancer, unknown
    primary, others

Peer-reviewed literature does not show medically
proven effectiveness
20
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
  • Non-Oncologic Medically appropriate
    indications
  • Epileptic seizures
  • Complex partial seizures, failed medical therapy,
    pre-surgical evaluation
  • Cardiac Applications
  • Determination of myocardial viability prior to
    revascularization in patients with LV dysfunction
  • Suspected CAD for evaluation of myocardial
    perfusion

When conventional imaging techniques are
inconclusive
21
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
  • Non-Oncologic Medically appropriate
    indications
  • Dementia and Neurodegenerative Diseases
  • Differential diagnosis of fronto-temporal
    dementia (FTD) and Alzheimers Disease (AD)
  • Documented cognitive decline for at least 6
    months
  • Meet criteria for both FTD and AD
  • SPECT test with inconclusive results
  • Comprehensive clinical exam
  • Evaluation by experienced physician
  • Clarification of diagnosis will guide treatment

22
Spiral Computed Tomography (CT)
  • Lung Cancer Screening
  • Routine screening of asymptomatic individuals at
    elevated risk for lung ca not medically proven
    to be effective in reducing mortality
  • Coronary Artery Calcification Screening
  • Routine screening of asymptomatic patients at
    either normal or high risk has not demonstrated
    a benefit to patient outcomes by improving
    prognostic information

Cochrane Database Systematic Review
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
23
Mammography Digital, Direct, Full-Field
  • Direct, full-field digital mammogram (FFDM)
  • Generated as a digital image initially
  • Conventional film (FSM) converted to digital
    image
  • Can alter orientation, magnification, brightness,
    contrast to highlight lesion
  • Large randomized study (49,500 patients)
    comparing SFM and FFDM National Cancer Institute
  • Comparative diagnostic performance
  • Impact of false positives on health-related
    quality of life and cost-effectiveness
  • Initial results 2006

http//www.cancer.gov/dmist
24
Genetic Testing vs Family History
  • Genetic testing
  • Single gene conditions
  • Very significant risk but few policyholders
  • Multifactorial conditions
  • One of many risk factors influencing major causes
    of claim
  • Family history
  • Important and well proven risk factor for many
    major conditions
  • Indicator of both genetic and environmental
    factors

25
Genetic Tests for Specific Diseases
  • Utilization of Genetic tests
  • Carrier screening identifying unaffected
    individuals who carry a copy of a gene that
    requires 2 copies to be expressed
  • Presymptomatic testing for predicting adult-onset
    disorders e.g. Huntingtons
  • Presymptomatic testing for estimating the risk of
    developing adult-onset diseases
  • Confirmational diagnosis of a symptomatic
    individual
  • Prenatal diagnostic testing
  • Newborn screening such as Phenylketonuria (PKU)

26
Genetic Tests for Specific Diseases
  • Medically appropriate indications
  • Patients whose family history indicates a
    significant risk for genetic defect for whom
    therapeutic measures, instituted as a result of
    knowledge of a particular defect, can prevent or
    mitigate future morbidity
  • Symptomatic patients who may have genetic disease
    or asymptomatic individuals who may have a
    genetic disease or strong family history of
    genetic disease where early diagnosis is important

27
Genetic Tests for Alzheimers Disease
  • Alzheimers Disease (AD)
  • 50-75 of cases of dementia
  • Estimated lifetime risk of AD is 15
  • More than 90 occurs after age 65
  • 4 genes associated with Alzheimer's
  • Susceptibility polymorphism at the Apolipoprotein
    E (APOE) Gene
  • 3 alleles-epsilon 2, 3, 4 3 most common
  • Every person carries 2 alleles
  • Presence of 1 ?4 associated with 1.2 to 3 fold
    increased risk of AD
  • Higher risk for homozygous ?4 -2 of population
  • ?4 not sufficiently sensitive or specific for
    diagnosis of AD

28
Genetic Tests for Alzheimers Disease
  • Early-onset AD
  • Before age 65, as early as 30 year 2-10 of AD
  • Autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance
  • 3 genes identified by linkage analysis
  • Amyloid-beta precursor protein gene (APP)
  • Presenilin 1 (PS1)gene
  • Presenilin 2 (PS2) gene
  • Nearly 100 penetrance
  • Variety of genetic mutations in 30-50 PS1 most
    common
  • Mutations are rare causes of AD

29
Genetic Tests for Alzheimers Disease
  • Clinical criteria for diagnosis of AD
  • Multiple cognitive deficits including memory
    impairment and at least 1
  • Aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, disturbance in
    executive function
  • Definitive diagnosis
  • Pathologic criteria
  • Presence of senile plaques, neurofibrillary
    tangles, neuronal loss, accumulation of
    beta-amyloid protein
  • Genetic testing not proven risk assessment tool
    nor diagnostic test

30
Genetic Testing for BRICA1 or BRICA2
  • Cancer risk
  • General population breast cancer
  • 1 for women up to age 40
  • 12.5 lifetime risk
  • Inherited risk
  • 5 to 10 of population breast cancer
  • 10 of population ovarian cancer
  • Alterations in BRICA1 and BRICA2 genes explain
    majority, but not all, inherited breast and
    ovarian cancer
  • BRICA1 and BRICA2
  • 60 to 85 lifetime risk of breast cancer
  • 15 to 40 lifetime risk of ovarian cancer
  • Prevalence of BRICA mutations 0.1 -0.2
    population

31
Genetic Testing for BRICA1 or BRICA2
  • High risk individuals
  • Three affected close relatives with breast cancer
    on same side of family including patient
  • Early age at breast cancer diagnosis (especially
    before age 45) in patient and/or close relative
  • One or more individuals with ovarian cancer at
    any age, in addition to one or more individuals
    on the same side of family with breast cancer at
    any age
  • Multiple primary breast or bilateral breast
    cancers in patient and/or one close relative
  • Breast cancer in male patient or male close
    relative
  • Women at high risk due to ethnic background
    (Ashkenazi Jewish descent) and with family
    history of one or more cases of breast cancer or
    ovarian cancer at any age

Close relative first and/or second degree
relatives on the same side of family
32
Oncotype Dx
  • Genetic assay of tumor tissue to determine
    prognosis of breast cancer
  • Prognosis is based on patient age, tumor size,
    histology, status of the axillary lymph nodes,
    histologic type, and hormone receptor status
  • Patients with same set of risk factors can have
    markedly different prognoses
  • More sensitive and specific risk factors would
    improve patient selection for adjuvant therapy
  • Gene expression in tumor tissue as prognostic
    factor

33
Oncotype Dx
  • Genetic assay of tumor tissue to determine
    prognosis of breast cancer
  • Patterns of genetic expression compared to
    outcome databases
  • Literature validation studies to identify the
    optimal set of cancer-related genes
  • No prospective studies that used this information
    in the management of the patients
  • No data showing this technology is useful to
    select or deselect patients for adjuvant therapy

34
Genotypic Analysis for Drug Metabolism
  • Pharmacogenomics
  • Study of how an individuals genetic inheritance
    affects the bodys response to drugs
  • Testing for important DNA sequence variations or
    polymorphisms (genotyping) in key
    drug-metabolizing enzymes, receptors,
    transporters
  • Results assist in choice of drug or dose to
    increase efficacy and/or avoid toxicity
  • Other factors influence variability of drug
    effects age, liver function, concomitant
    diseases, nutrition, smoking, and drug-drug
    interactions

35
Genotypic Analysis for Drug Metabolism
  • Pharmacogenomics - Observations
  • Assay need only be performed once relevance of
    information must be validated for each drug
  • Not all drug prescribing will benefit from
    pharmacogenetic approach
  • Good retrospective evidence to support clinical
    validity
  • Clinical utility of retrospective data remains
    unproved
  • No prospective studies on drug choice, dose,
    outcomes
  • Reduced activity in a particular CYP450 enzyme
    because of genotype may not affect outcomes when
    other metabolic pathways are available

36
Genotypic Analysis for Drug Metabolism
  • AmpliChip CYP450 genotyping testing kit
  • Tests white blood cells for 29 polymorphisms and
    mutations for CYP2D6 gene and 2 polymorphisms for
    the CYP2C19 gene
  • CYP2D6 metabolizes 25 of all clinically used
    medications (e.g. dextromethorphan, beta
    blockers, antiarrhythmics, antidepressants,
    morphine derivatives)
  • CYP2C19 metabolizes others (e.g. proton pump
    inhibitors diazepam, propanolol, imipramine and
    amitryptiline)

37
Other Genetic Testing Kits
  • Invader UGT1A1 Molecular Assay test
  • Detects genetic variation in UGT1A1 gene that
    produces enzyme active in metabolism of colon
    cancer drug irinotecan
  • Trugene HIV-1 Genotyping Kit
  • Detects variations in the genome of the human
    immunodeficiency virus associated with
    anti-retroviral drug resistance
  • PRO-Predict TPMT
  • Identify TPMT gene mutation in patients receiving
    AZA/6-MP at risk for bone marrow suppression

38
  • Questions?
  • Patricia.Bomba_at_lifethc.com

Knowing is not enough we must apply. Willing
is not enough we must do. Goethe
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