A large community oncology practice initiated a retrospective quality improvement initiative to address challenges in identifying patients with HER2-low metastatic breast cancer (mBC) based on information available within the electronic medical record (EMR).
Medical records for patients with mBC treated between January 1, 2023, and August 11, 2023, were queried within OncoEMR and chart reviews were performed. HER2 test results were included regardless of stage when tested. Patients with mBC with an HER2 immunohistochemistry (IHC) score of 1+ or 2+/in situ hybridization–negative (ISH–) were considered “HER2-low,” IHC 0 was considered HER2-negative” (HER2–), IHC 3+ or fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)–positive was labeled “HER2-positive” (HER2+) and patients who were referred to as “HER2-negative” in clinical notes but who did not have a HER2 IHC score documented in the EMR or within an embedded pathology report were considered “indeterminate.”
Of 376 patients with mBC, 101 (27%) patients were HER2+, 95 (25%) were HER2– (IHC 0), 120 (32%) were HER2-low (IHC 1+ or 2+/ISH–), 6 (1.5%) patients had conflicting IHC scores, and 54 (14%) were noted as “HER2-negative” in the EMR but did not have documented HER2 IHC scores (ie, indeterminate). Of the indeterminate patient group, the following scenarios attributed to lack of IHC score:
Most publications to date have explored laboratory barriers to diagnosing HER2-low patients, yet there continue to be major obstacles for community oncology practitioners. Pathology reports are typically PDF documents embedded in the EMR, found under varying tabs or fields, and not easily queried. Community practices send testing to multiple different laboratories with various report formats that may not prominently display the HER2 IHC score. Also, clinicians may not cross-reference the original pathology report while reviewing clinical notes or patient referrals. Finally, certain laboratories perform FISH testing alone up front for HER2 in patients with breast cancer.