Feature

Most community physicians say clinical pathways improve care


 

The path to more effective use of clinical pathways in oncology practice lies in greater collaboration between the various sectors – oncology practices, payors, employers, pathways’ vendors, pharmaceutical manufacturers and patients – said Winston Wong, PharmD, president of W-Squared Group in Longboat Key, Fla., and editor-in-chief of the Journal of Clinical Pathways.

Dr. Wong presented findings from the journal’s annual Oncology Clinical Pathways Benchmarking Survey at the Oncology Clinical Pathways Congress, which was held in October. As fee for service gives way to performance-based and risk-bearing reimbursements, he said, “we are observing renewed interest in pathways implementation among a more diverse group of [health care providers].”

More survey respondents said they expected to implement pathways within the next 2 years than in past surveys. “I think it’s partly because payors are starting to delegate more care decisions back to oncology practices, making them more accountable for the care they provide,” Dr. Wong said.

The 2021 survey included 871 respondents, most of them direct care providers based in community practices. At 94%, most said they believed clinical pathways increased quality of care, 87% said they improved clinical outcomes, and 84% said they controlled costs.

Also presented at the meeting were preliminary findings of the JCP 2021 Care Pathways Working Group, which identified barriers to wider clinical pathways use. These include a fragmented health care system, minimal interoperability between systems, lack of integration into practice work flows, lack of reduction in administrative burden and lack of understanding by payers of the impact of social determinants of health.

Oncology clinical pathways are protocols and drug regimens for cancer care. They are used by oncology practices, academic medical centers, health systems, payors, and third-party vendors to address efficacy, safety, tolerability, and cost, but physicians have raised concerns about the administrative burden of working with pathways or pathways that emphasize cost-cutting at the expense of treatment choices or the flexibility to respond to unique patient circumstances.

The American Society of Clinical Oncology responded to member concerns about pathways in a 2016 Policy Statement on Clinical Pathways in Oncology. The following year, ASCO issued Criteria for High-Quality Clinical Pathways, offering a mechanism for evaluating the quality of a pathway, which according to ASCO’s criteria should be expert driven, evidence based, patient focused, up to date, and comprehensive, with multiple stakeholder input.

“There’s uncertainty among providers as the health care system continues to evolve toward value-based care models,” said Stephen Grubbs, MD, ASCO’s vice president of care delivery. “There are a lot of challenges. Practices are at different points in their journey toward value-based care and how to reconcile their care delivery models with the alternate payment models.”

Robin T. Zon, MD, FACP, FASCO, a medical oncologist at Michiana Hematology Oncology in Mishawaka, Ind., and chair of ASCO’s Pathways Task Force, which has since disbanded, was asked if she thought integration of pathways into practice has improved in the 4 years since the task force completed its work. “We think so, but we don’t have the data to support that conclusion,” she replied. “We were concerned about how we could make life easier for clinicians having to deal with preauthorization and helping them with the administrative burdens. Our society is trying to point to the path forward.”

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