Abstract: Patient-centered medical homes (PCMHs) have been designed to offer coordinated care delivery across the entire spectrum of care, aiming to provide optimal care for patients given their individual circumstances. The hope is that better care coordination will reduce cost and resource utilization and lead to better cost value for health care. Clinical pathways and guidelines are tools that can measure and improve care, where outcomes can be measured against prior historical data. Most of the models for PCMHs are primary care models. The hematopoietic cellular therapy (HCT) community has offered such a care model for high-acuity complex patients for several decades despite never having the label of “medical home.” These patients have been subject to bundled payments and have had outcomes reported in a national outcomes database, because these programs started as clinical research programs with treatment delivered according to research protocols. More recently, these protocols for routine care have morphed into clinical pathways and guidelines. Measurements can be compared with a center’s historical outcomes as these HCT centers are required to track outcomes of patients in an institutional database. A center’s outcomes can also be compared to international registry outcomes for which centers are federally mandated to report their allogeneic transplant outcomes. The experiences of HCT centers that deliver this type of coordinated, medical home care provide useful insight for care settings moving toward a value-based care model.
Complex clinical care is often best administered with coordinated integration of inpatient and outpatient services1-6 Management of specific problems can be done by consulting clinical guidelines, where the guidelines can be assessed for utility and validity with observation of results compared with prior historical outcomes. But patients rarely present with a solitary problem; rather, they have a problem requiring assessment, intervention, and treatment in the context of multiple comorbidities, which are not always fully assessed and adequately treated. Often treatment of one disease will affect treatment of other comorbidities, sometimes adversely.
Not all patients requiring complex care have fully functional support systems enabling optimal care delivery in the lowest cost venue. Patient-centered medical homes (PCMHs) emphasize a coordinated care model to manage circumstances unique to that patient’s medical and social circumstances.7,8 However, coordinated care may not reduce costs as it tries to provide optimal care.9,10 For this reason, a tool to reduce costs and reduce variation should be used as well, such as clinical pathways.
The area of hematopoietic cellular therapy (HCT) provides an example of how complex clinical care can be coordinated and managed in a medical home model and by using clinical pathways.11 HCT is a complex therapy used for the treatment of bone-marrow-derived cancers like leukemia, lymphoma, myeloma, bone marrow failure diseases like aplastic anemia and inherited metabolic, and immunologic disorders. This therapy shifted from being a solely investigational research therapy to a standard-of-care option for many patients. Because it was a research therapy originally, care was determined and executed according to institutional review board-approved clinical research protocols. As the therapy matured and became standard of care, much of the care for common complications and preventive therapy was determined by clinical pathways and guidelines.
Those in the HCT field have and continue to track and compare outcomes in an effort to improve survival and reduce mortality. In 1972, HCT-associated organizations established an international outcomes database titled the International Bone Marrow Transplant Registry (IBMTR), which, after a merger with the National Marrow Donor Program, is now part of the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplantation Research (CIBMTR).12 The CIBMTR was awarded the contract to run the Stem Cell Transplant Outcomes Database, where all US allogeneic HCT outcomes are tracked and reported as required by the 2005 Stem Cell Therapeutic and Research Act.13 Since its inception in 1972, the IBMTR and its successor CIBMTR has facilitated over 1000 peer-reviewed publications with dramatic impacts on changes in standard of care, resulting in consistent improvement in transplant survival over the past 40 years. With the use and assessment of guidelines, care measurement, a comprehensive outcomes registry (CIBMTR), and its placement in academic medical centers, HCT care delivery provides a model for exploring options for value-based care in settings outside of primary care and relevant to complex specialty care. 14,15
Hematopoietic Cellular Therapy Background
Originally, HCT was to provide hematopoietic stem cell rescue after treatment with high doses of chemotherapy and radiation therapy where the principle toxicity of such therapy was bone marrow failure. Options for rescue graft were either from the patient, being harvested prior to the high-dose therapy as an autologous donor, or the graft came from another person (allogeneic donor) closely immunologically matched with the intended recipient patient. Further science demonstrated that the graft from an allogeneic donor had an immunologic “graft vs tumor” effect. Even an autologous transplant was associated with regrowth of the immune system that allowed for added benefit.
HCT is associated often with a month-long initial hospital stay as the high-dose therapy is administered, followed by the graft infusion, and a pancytopenia phase while awaiting the graft recovery. HCT patients are at high risk of multiple complications including severe infection, debilitation, inability to adequately hydrate via oral intake, electrolyte loss, immunologic complications, and recurrent peripheral blood cytopenias—all of which may result in high rates of hospital readmission.16,17
Patients who undergo HCT have frequent outpatient therapy visits after initial transplant discharge, often coming in 3 to 7 times per week for a prolonged period over several months. These visits require immediate routine laboratory testing with quick turnaround of results, intravenous (IV) hydration, IV electrolyte replacement, IV antibiotics, and urgent transfusion of blood products. Blood products for these severely immunocompromised patients must be irradiated and often are difficult to crossmatch given that HCT donor and recipient are not always of the same blood type.18-20
HCT patients are much sicker and more complex than almost any other type of oncology patient. The only comparable group in terms of acuity is patients with acute leukemia, who will often proceed to hematopoietic cell transplant for treatment.21,22 Consequently, acute leukemia patients are frequently managed by the same team and care centers as patients undergoing HCT.