Abstract: The United States has one of the most expensive heath care systems in the world, and the costs of cancer care are rising faster than costs in other medical fields. Value-based care is being implemented in many health care sectors in an effort to deliver high-quality care that is also more cost-effective. Use of clinical pathways is one strategy being used by many payers to encourage oncology care providers to standardize care. However, the patient perspective has not been incorporated into the development and use of clinical pathways in cancer care. This phenomenological qualitative study explores patient perspectives regarding clinical pathways and their use as a shared decision-making tool in the delivery of cancer care. Results showed that participants were generally unaware of the use of clinical pathways. Participants acknowledged the value of standardized care but emphasized their preference for shared decision-making and the importance of individualized care that was not limited by clinical pathway recommendations. Implications for practice, research, and policy are discussed.
Acknowledgments: We are grateful to the cancer survivors that participated in this study.
The United States spends more money on each individual patient medically than any other nation, making it the most expensive health care system in the world.1 The costs of US cancer care, in particular, are rising more quickly than costs in other medical sectors,2 increasing at a rate of 15% annually,3 and accounting for 5% of total US health care spending.4 Per person costs of cancer care exceed all other diseases.5 With over 15.5 million survivors,6 and an aging population living longer and at greater risk of being diagnosed with cancer, the costs of cancer care continue to grow.
Drug expenditures are a leading health care cost driver, and antineoplastic agents currently represent the largest cost to Medicare or hospital pharmacies.4 Drug prices in the United States are typically 2 to 6 times more expensive than in other industrialized nations.7 In fact, 20% of cancer costs in the United States come from drugs developed in the last 5 years.8 While there are more cancer treatment options available than ever, there may be only minor differences in efficacy and toxicity yet wide variations in cost.9 Although the price of drugs has played a major role in the rising costs of cancer care, there are multiple contributing factors. An increasing prevalence of cancer in the overall population has been suggested as a major cost driver.9 Additionally, higher costs have been attributed to the greater availability of more expensive treatments and more aggressive treatment recommendations, as well as the shift in cancer treatment location—more patients are seen in the hospital for cancer care vs being seen in outpatient clinics.10
In response to these rising costs, there has been an increasing demand for high-quality, value-based cancer care. Although various stakeholders define value differently, perhaps one of the most simple definitions of value in health care is care that is delivered at the lowest cost with the lowest toxicity yet maintaining the highest quality.11 Although this value definition does not incorporate a host of factors that may be important to patients such as quality of life, social and emotional stressors, or logistical concerns, it does illustrate an overall desire to improve population health while reducing the cost burden to the health care system.
One mechanism that has been widely implemented to drive value-based care is the clinical pathway. Clinical pathways differ from clinical guidelines in that guidelines provide information for all available treatment options that have been recommended by professional societies or are evidence-based.12 Clinical pathways are a management tool that outline a selected subset of evidence-based regimens for delivering cancer care to patients based on specific presentations such as state and stage of disease.13 Clinical pathways include specific treatment details such as the names of medications, appropriate dosing levels, and administration schedules.13 Pathways can be used to promote patient adherence to prescribed treatment plans, reduce variation in the ways in which different patients receive care, enhance communication between patient and provider, and promote patient education about complex treatment decisions.14 Indeed, clinical pathways have been increasingly implemented by third-party payers, health care institutions, and commercial organizations to reduce treatment variation and control costs.14 A 2010 review comparing clinical pathways with usual standards of care found that clinical pathways were associated with reduced in-hospital complications, improved documentation of treatment, and an overall decrease in hospital costs.15
However, there are concerns regarding the overall benefit of clinical pathways to patients. In an era of personalized medicine, clinical pathways may not always fit the individualized needs of patients. Payers have a financial interest in cost containment, which may sometimes conflict with clinical judgment16 and patient values and goals. There is also a movement toward incentivized pathways, which provide financial benefits to providers who place patients on pathway-specified treatment regimens. These incentivized arrangements can erode patient trust, as the patient may question the underlying motivation of the provider. Although a provider may choose to override a specified pathway, it can take additional time for approval from payers, which ultimately delays the delivery of appropriate patient care.16
Although initially created to reduce variability in treatment, multiple pathways from various institutions can mean that patients with identical diagnoses, but with different insurance coverage, can receive different on-pathway regimens.14 Additionally, not all companies that create, nor parties that utilize, clinical pathways do so in a transparent manner. Patients may not have access to the evidence-base behind each pathway nor be informed of alternative treatment options from which to choose.
Finally, pathways do not incorporate all aspects that patients take into consideration when making treatment decisions, as briefly noted above. Patient values are not typically considered in pathway creation, and pathways can create a one-size-fits-all approach to cancer care that does not take into consideration the unique circumstances of individual patients. In addition to clinical pathways, it is widely agreed that shared decision-making is a cornerstone of providing outstanding patient-centered care.17 Shared decision-making has been shown to improve patients’ understanding of treatment options, resulting in more conservative care choices and leading to lower health care costs.18
Ultimately, clinical pathways may make it difficult for patients and providers to engage in a shared-decision making model based on evidence, which simultaneously addresses the needs, values, and preferences of the patient. The aims of this study were (1) to describe cancer patient understanding and personal experiences of clinical pathways and (2) to explore cancer patient experiences of shared decision-making and the use of clinical pathways in cancer care.