A Better Pathway? Building Consensus and Engaging Providers with Feedback to Improve and Standardize Cancer Care.

Clin Breast Cancer

QURE Healthcare, San Francisco, CA; Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, CA; Department of Health Policy and Management, University of California, Los Angeles, CA. Electronic address:

Published: April 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Unwanted variation in oncology care is common in the U.S., leading to inconsistent treatment and high costs, despite efforts to standardize care through guidelines.
  • A study implemented patient simulation and developed multidisciplinary pathways for breast cancer treatment, leading to significant improvements in care consistency and quality.
  • The introduction of clinical pathways resulted in a quality score increase from 47.5% to 61.1%, reduced unnecessary tests, and improved adherence to preferred treatment regimens among providers.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Unwanted clinical variation is common across the United States health care system and is particularly vexing in oncology owing to the complexity, morbidity, and high cost of the disease. Efforts to standardize care including guidelines and continuing medical education have had only limited impact. Disease-specific oncology clinical pathways hold the promise of reducing variation but have been hampered by a lack of ownership and accountability among oncology providers.

Materials And Methods: We describe the utility of combining a patient simulation-based clinical variation measurement with the in-house development of multidisciplinary breast cancer pathways at a National Cancer Institute-designated cancer center.

Results: At baseline, we found high variation in care decisions across the multidisciplinary team and within individual specialties in the management of simulated patients. Development and introduction of breast cancer clinical pathways combined with individual and group feedback on pathway adherence led to significant increases in pathway-aligned care decisions and decreases in measured variation. Overall quality scores increased from 47.5% to 61.1% (P < .001), with the largest improvement in diagnostic accuracy (+22.1%). Providers also ordered fewer unnecessary tests, saving an estimated $305 per patient case. Adherence to preferred chemotherapy regimens increased for both medical oncologists (+16%) and other members of the multidisciplinary team (+19%).

Conclusion: Our work shows that a structured process to measure clinical variation and provide personalized feedback to an oncology multidisciplinary team drives adoption of evidence-based pathways, less unneeded spending, and higher quality care for patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clbc.2018.12.010DOI Listing

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