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Implementation and Clinical Adoption of Precision Oncology Workflows Across a Healthcare Network.

Authors :
Dias-Santagata D
Heist RS
Bard AZ
da Silva AFL
Dagogo-Jack I
Nardi V
Ritterhouse LL
Spring LM
Jessop N
Farahani AA
Mino-Kenudson M
Allen J
Goyal L
Parikh A
Misdraji J
Shankar G
Jordan JT
Martinez-Lage M
Frosch M
Graubert T
Fathi AT
Hobbs GS
Hasserjian RP
Raje N
Abramson J
Schwartz JH
Sullivan RJ
Miller D
Hoang MP
Isakoff S
Ly A
Bouberhan S
Watkins J
Oliva E
Wirth L
Sadow PM
Faquin W
Cote GM
Hung YP
Gao X
Wu CL
Garg S
Rivera M
Le LP
John Iafrate A
Juric D
Hochberg EP
Clark J
Bardia A
Lennerz JK
Source :
The oncologist [Oncologist] 2022 Nov 03; Vol. 27 (11), pp. 930-939.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: Precision oncology relies on molecular diagnostics, and the value-proposition of modern healthcare networks promises a higher standard of care across partner sites. We present the results of a clinical pilot to standardize precision oncology workflows.<br />Methods: Workflows are defined as the development, roll-out, and updating of disease-specific molecular order sets. We tracked the timeline, composition, and effort of consensus meetings to define the combination of molecular tests. To assess clinical impact, we examined order set adoption over a two-year period (before and after roll-out) across all gastrointestinal and hepatopancreatobiliary (GI) malignancies, and by provider location within the network.<br />Results: Development of 12 disease center-specific order sets took ~9 months, and the average number of tests per indication changed from 2.9 to 2.8 (P = .74). After roll-out, we identified significant increases in requests for GI patients (17%; P < .001), compliance with testing recommendations (9%; P < .001), and the fraction of "abnormal" results (6%; P < .001). Of 1088 GI patients, only 3 received targeted agents based on findings derived from non-recommended orders (1 before and 2 after roll-out); indicating that our practice did not negatively affect patient treatments. Preliminary analysis showed 99% compliance by providers in network sites, confirming the adoption of the order sets across the network.<br />Conclusion: Our study details the effort of establishing precision oncology workflows, the adoption pattern, and the absence of harm from the reduction of non-recommended orders. Establishing a modifiable communication tool for molecular testing is an essential component to optimize patient care via precision oncology.<br /> (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1549-490X
Volume :
27
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The oncologist
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35852437
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/oncolo/oyac134