Clinical Summary

Data from ACG 2022 Podium Presentation1

An Objective Spatialomics Test Standardizes Management Decisions with Potential to Improve Outcomes for Barrett’s Esophagus Patients

Nicola F. Frei, Lucas C. Duits, Amir M. Khoshiwal, Roos E. Pouw, TissueCypher SURF LGD Study Pathologist Consortium, Christian Smolko, Meenakshi Arora, Jennifer J. Siegel, Rebecca J. Critchley-Thorne, and Jacques J.G.H.M. Bergman

 

Abstract

Risk stratification of patients in Barrett’s esophagus (BE) surveillance is largely based on histologic review of biopsies by pathologists, specifically focused on the identification of patients with dysplasia as a surrogate for progression to cancer. However, level of dysplasia is a suboptimal correlate for progression, and new tools to optimize patient risk stratification based on actual progression to high-grade dysplasia (HGD) and esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) are needed. A previous study presented at DDW 20222 showed that TissueCypher outperformed 16 general and 14 expert GI pathologists in risk-stratification of BE patients based on outcome to HGD or EAC (progressors). This study evaluated the impact that variability in pathologic diagnosis has on patient care and shows that adding guidance from TissueCypher to the standard of care can improve the consistency of management and increase the percentage of progressors that receive appropriate treatment while reducing the number of non-progressors that are over treated.

The results indicate that TissueCypher may be used to standardize management of BE patients to improve health outcomes:

Aims

The aims of this study were to evaluate whether the use of the TissueCypher test can standardize clinical management decisions for BE patients with initial diagnoses of LGD reviewed by various pathologists, and increase the percentage of patients who receive appropriate management in a manner consistent with improved health outcomes.

Methods

The study generated 500 management decision simulations for each of the 154 patients. Each simulation started with a diagnosis from one of the 16 general pathologists. If the diagnosis was low-grade dysplasia (LGD) then confirmation from an expert pathologist in the same country was required, in accordance with guideline recommendations. Next an additional 500 simulations were generated using guidance from the TissueCypher Risk Class. The simulations for each patient were then evaluated based on the patient’s known outcome.

Management Decision Simulation Design

* Patients had an initial community diagnosis of LGD but only 19% were confirmed to be LGD, 13% were downstaged to IND and 68% were downstaged to NDBE upon average expert review.2
** NDBE/IND scored High/Int-risk were reviewed by expert pathologist.

Analysis

Each patient’s simulations were evaluated based on their known outcome as a progressor or non-progressor. The percentage of appropriate management decisions resulting from the 500 simulations were calculated for each patient. To assess consistency of management decisions, standard deviation was calculated across all 154 patients. In this study appropriate management for a non-progressor was 3-to-5-year surveillance and for a progressor was <1 year surveillance or EET.

Appropriate Management Per Known Outcome Non-Progressor Progressor
3-5y surveillance interval o x
<1y surveillance x o
Endoscopic eradication therapy x o
o - Appropriate Management x - Inappropriate management

Results

TissueCypher guidance clinically and statistically improved the standard of care by increasing the likelihood of appropriate management decisions for all patients and decreasing the variability in management that results from basing care solely on the diagnoses of dysplasia.

Figure 1 shows the % of appropriate management for all patients was improved by the addition of guidance from TissueCypher to the standard of care (SOC), with the median increasing from 80% to 100%. For progressors there was an increase in the percent receiving EET and a decreased percentage receiving 3-to-5-year surveillance. For non-progressors there was an increased percentage that were managed by 3-to-5-year surveillance.

Figure 2 illustrates the improvement in consistency of management across all 500 simulations. For the standard of care (SOC) 7.1% of patients experienced no deviation in management across all 500 simulations. The addition of guidance from TissueCypher increased this number to 57.1% of patients that saw no deviation across all 500 simulations.

       

References

  1. Frei NF et al. Am J Gastroenterol. 2022 Oct;117(10S):e269
  2. Khoshiwal AM et al. Gastroenterology. 2022 May;162(7): S-174
  3. Phoa KN et al. JAMA. 2014; 311(12): 1209-17
  4. Frei NF et al. Am J Gastroenterol. 2021 Apr;116(4):675-82
  5. Shaheen NJ et al. Am J Gastroenterol. 2022 Apr;117(4):559-87
  6. Muthusamy VR et al. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2022 Dec;20(12):2696-706.e1

Have questions about integrating TissueCypher® into your practice?

Contact us to discuss the science behind our technology and how TissueCypher® can be integrated into your practice.