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Re: antihama post# 1957

Friday, 12/01/2017 7:49:07 PM

Friday, December 01, 2017 7:49:07 PM

Post# of 3283
More on the genetic testing

Foundation Medicine gets FDA, CMS nods for pan-cancer genomic test
by Nick Paul Taylor |
Dec 1, 2017 7:02am
Foundation Medicine has brought its pan-cancer test through the parallel review process, securing FDA approval and a likely coverage by Medicare. The approval is the first time the FDA has signed off on such a broad test.
FoundationOne CDx (F1CDx), the diagnostic covered by the rulings, is an NGS-based test to detect alterations in 324 genes relevant to non-small cell lung cancer, breast cancer, colorectal cancer, ovarian cancer and melanoma. F1CDx also provides information on microsatellite instability and tumor mutational burden.
Foundation Medicine parcels up the information into reports designed to help physicians match each patient to an approved targeted therapy, immunotherapy or clinical trial. These reports show which FDA-approved drugs use the test as a companion diagnostic—there are currently 15—and have led Foundation Medicine to frame F1CDx as an “easy button” for physicians.
In moving away from the one test, one drug model that has defined companion diagnostics so far, Foundation Medicine should also reduce the burden on patients and accelerate the identification of the most appropriate treatment.
“Tissue samples in solid tumors are hard to come by. Here, you can get, with one tissue sample, information on the alterations that could stem from any one or a combination of more than 300 genes. That's really important,” Melanie Nallicheri, chief business officer and head of biopharma at Foundation Medicine, said.
Foundation Medicine picked up the FDA approval on the same day the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) proposed coverage of the test. Assuming the CMS decision is finalized after the 90-day public comment administrative period, the test will become available through Medicare and the Medicare Advantage plans provided by commercial payers.
The parallel processing of regulatory and reimbursement decisions will cut the time it takes for patients to access the test. Foundation Medicine is the second company, after Exact Sciences, to go through the parallel process. And, like Exact, it had a good experience.
“The process has been very positive and constructive for us with both agencies. Both organizations see the benefits of the process,” Nallicheri said.