Background: Widespread adoption of secure messaging (SM) provides patients with cancer with unprecedented access to medical providers at the expense of increased workload for oncologists. Herein, we analyze oncology SM clinical content and acuity and translate these to estimated cost savings from reduced appointments.

Methods: This population-based retrospective cohort study examined the content of patient-initiated SM threads exchanged through the patient portal website or app over 1 year (June 1, 2021-May 31, 2022) at 21 Kaiser Permanente Northern California oncology practices, which typically do not have patient copayments associated with SM. A random sample of 500 SM threads were reviewed and categorized by message content, acuity, and appropriate level of service. Cost and time estimates were used to compare the cost of SM management by oncologists alone versus assisted by medical assistants and nurses.

Results: During the study, 41,272 patients initiated 334,053 unique SM threads to 132 oncologists. Of the SM threads reviewed, only 26.8% required oncologist expertise. Based on thread content, the remaining 73.2% may have been better managed by a nurse (38.2%), medical assistant (28.4%), primary care physician (5.4%), or another subspecialty provider (1.2%). Emergency care was recommended in 2.4% of the threads reviewed. Significant medical care was provided to patients in 24.4% of the reviewed threads that would typically require an appointment. We estimate that the SM exchanges provided $11.2 million in care, including $3.6 million in avoided out-of-pocket copayment costs to patients and $7.6 million in missed billing codes.

Conclusions: High utilization of SM generates additional workload for oncologists that could mostly be appropriately managed by alternate providers. The magnitude of unreimbursed medical care provided via SM and the use of SM for emergent medical situations creates an urgent need for new practice models. An alternative architecture for triaging, managing, and billing SM could reduce costs and oncologist burnout.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.6004/jnccn.2024.7055DOI Listing

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