Selection of Germline Genetic Testing Panels in Patients With Cancer: ASCO Guideline.
Nadine M TungCharité RickerHans MessersmithJudith BalmañaSusan M DomchekElena Martinez StoffelKhaldoun AlmhannaBanu K ArunYanin Chavarri GuerraStephanie A CohenDeborah CragunKatherine D CrewMichael J HallGregory E IdosGhecemy LopezTuya PalSara Pirzadeh-MillerColin C PritchardHuma Q RanaUmang SwamiGregory A VidalPublished in: Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (2024)
Patients should have a family history taken and recorded that includes details of cancers in first- and second-degree relatives and the patient's ethnicity. When more than one gene is relevant based on personal and/or family history, multigene panel testing should be offered. When considering what genes to include in the panel, the minimal panel should include the more strongly recommended genes from Table 1 and may include those less strongly recommended. A broader panel may be ordered when the potential benefits are clearly identified, and the potential harms from uncertain results should be mitigated. Patients who meet criteria for germline genetic testing should be offered germline testing regardless of results from tumor testing. Patients who would not normally be offered germline genetic testing based on personal and/or family history criteria but who have a pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant identified by tumor testing in a gene listed in Table 2 under the outlined circumstances should be offered germline testing.Additional information is available at www.asco.org/molecular-testing-and-biomarkers-guidelines.