RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Impact of subsidies on cancer genetic testing uptake in Singapore JF Journal of Medical Genetics JO J Med Genet FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP 254 OP 259 DO 10.1136/jmedgenet-2016-104302 VO 54 IS 4 A1 Li, Shao-Tzu A1 Yuen, Jeanette A1 Zhou, Ke A1 Binte Ishak, Nur Diana A1 Chen, Yanni A1 Met-Domestici, Marie A1 Chan, Sock Hoai A1 Tan, Yee Pin A1 Allen, John Carson A1 Lim, Soon Thye A1 Soo, Khee Chee A1 Ngeow, Joanne YR 2017 UL http://jmg.bmj.com/content/54/4/254.abstract AB Purpose Previous reports cite high costs of clinical cancer genetic testing as main barriers to patient's willingness to test. We report findings of a pilot study that evaluates how different subsidy schemes impact genetic testing uptake and total cost of cancer management.Methods We included all patients who attended the Cancer Genetics Service at the National Cancer Centre Singapore (January 2014–May 2016). Two subsidy schemes, the blanket scheme (100% subsidy to all eligible patients), and the varied scheme (patients received 50%–100% subsidy dependent on financial status) were compared. We estimated total spending on cancer management from government's perspective using a decision model.Results 445 patients were included. Contrasting against the blanket scheme, the varied scheme observed a higher attendance of patients (34 vs 8 patients per month), of which a higher proportion underwent genetic testing (5% vs 38%), while lowering subsidy spending per person (S$1098 vs S$1161). The varied scheme may potentially save cost by reducing unnecessary cancer surveillance when first-degree relatives uptake rate is above 36%.Findings Provision of subsidy leads to a considerable increase in genetic testing uptake rate. From the government's perspective, subsidising genetic testing may potentially reduce total costs on cancer management.