The US Oncology Network (The Network) is currently celebrating its 20th anniversary. Founded in 1999, The Network helps independent physicians deliver value-based, integrated care to patients in the community. Through The Network, independent practices can join together to benefit from shared expertise and gain access to resources to advance local cancer care with the aim of delivering better patient outcomes.
The Network provides practices with access to coordinated resources, best business practices, and the experience, infrastructure, and support of McKesson Corporation. This collaboration allows the providers in The Network to focus on the health of their patients, while The Network focuses on the health of their practices.
Journal of Clinical Pathways (JCP) spoke with three leaders from The Network and McKesson to get their take on the pressing issues in oncology care today and how their structure and clinical pathways are supporting their practice and patient care goals. Marcus Neubauer, MD, is chief medical officer for The Network. He is a founding member and past chair of The US Oncology Network Pathways Task Force and led their collaboration with the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) to build a premium set of pathways called Value Pathways powered by NCCN. Diana K Verrilli is senior vice president, Strategy and Practice Solutions at McKesson. She leads the provider specialty business strategy, technology product portfolio, payer contracting, practice transformation, and clinical and pharmacy initiatives. Further, she oversees value-based provider contracts designed to improve oncology care and better manage escalating cancer costs. Heather Morel, PhD, is the chief operating officer for The Network and supports practices with all aspects of operations and strategy implementation.
Before we discuss the newer Network initiatives, do you want to lay a foundation for those who may not be as familiar with The Network? How did it start initially and who were the key players? Were you founded in response to certain shifts in oncology care?
Dr Neubauer: The Network was formed in 1999 and actually existed in two different precursor groups prior to 1999: American Oncology Resources and Physician Reliance Network.
To highlight The Network by the numbers: today we have over 1400 physicians and around 500 advanced practice providers. We are located in 25 states and see about 900,000 patients per year. We primarily use a single electronic medical record (EMR), so we have an opportunity to first enter clinical facts at the practices, aggregate data, then analyze, report, and learn from our data at The Network level. This gives you some idea of our scale. We are a multispecialty oncology organization that includes medical oncology, radiation oncology, bone marrow transplantation, surgical oncology, and ancillary support to provide enhanced patient care.
Our original mission was to provide high-quality care close to home. There were several practices that recognized the opportunity to come together in a beneficial way and form an organization. Practice consolidation made sense 20 years ago and is even more relevant today.
To give you an idea of the challenges back then, reimbursement by Medicare and private payers was not well understood, and competition existed in our communities with hospitals and academic centers. We needed capital to build cancer facilities in order to grow and support our vision for comprehensive cancer care in the community. The Network proved to be a great partner to help accomplish this goal.
All this being said, I think these challenges pale compared to those that oncologists face today with an onslaught of new science, needs for great technology, data analytics, and new (value-based) government and private payer reimbursement models. Through all these new challenges, I think The Network has become even stronger, and our practices are more aligned with The Network than ever before.
Ms Verrilli: What is happening in the marketplace overall? Several major industry trends are altering the health care landscape: (1) cancer care is increasing in complexity, and across the general health care system, it is more complicated administratively. From a Network perspective, how do we develop processes and tools that enable our physicians to deliver leading edge care to patients—to be pathway adherent, to be aware of changes in protocols, and to stay current on new drugs that come to market? If we think about chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy, for example, what is our role in enabling support for this type of therapy? On the administrative side, whether it’s prior authorization, new government requirements, technology, or value-based care–there is more burden on the physician; (2) there’s an increase in health care costs, again, very true in cancer care but really across the board; (3) the government is making major moves—whether it’s proposing the International Pricing Index, the Competitive Acquisition Program, or implementing programs like the Oncology Care Model (OCM)—the government is actively shaping how we’ll be paid and how quality and patient satisfaction will be measured; (4) there are also new entrants, eg, start-up companies that aim to disrupt the market and larger established players like Amazon; and finally, (5) we’ve seen a lot of horizontal consolidation and vertical integration. Some Network practices have been approached to join hospitals and are threatened when hospitals acquire key referring physicians in the market. When Aetna and CVS merged, we had to decide what it meant for The Network? How will this combined
entity impact patient access, patient benefits, narrow networks, etc?
Finally, another challenge Network practices face is physician burnout. We are investing in programs to address this concern. We believe that cultural alignment and a focus on quality are important drivers that keep physicians and their teams aligned in meaningful ways to ensure the health and sustainability essential to keeping community oncology practices independent.
Could give us more insight into the Value Pathways that you are currently using, that is, their development and how you update them and work with NCCN?
Dr Neubauer: In the early 2000s, Network practices got together and talked about developing clinical pathways. We had some supporters and some dissenters. But, ultimately, the leaders of The Network (representing their practices) felt this was important for us to do—that is, when there is overlap or duplication among certain therapies, why not identify certain regimens that may
drive better value? That is what we set out to do 15 years ago, and this is still what we do today—identify preferred value-based regimens and present these choices at the point of care. There is a need for providers to have information at their fingertips to make good decisions for their patients.
Notably, The Network was bought by McKesson in 2010, a very large health care corporation. The Network operates as an independent business organization within McKesson and has been able to retain its general principles, one of which is that clinical pathways are and should be entirely physician led and physician driven.
We have a pathways committee of 13 physicians. We felt this was a good number enabling us to be nimble, especially with the onslaught of new drugs entering the market. Starting in 2013, we include NCCN guideline panel members on our pathways committee. This is unique; we are the only pathways program with this deeper relationship with NCCN, where members of NCCN Guideline Panels are also members of our Pathways Task Force and contribute to the content, decision making, deliberations, and the final vote. Having NCCN panel member participation lends extra expertise and validation. We changed the name of our pathways from “Level I Pathways” to “Value Pathways powered by NCCN” in 2013 to represent this relationship.
The committee meets once a month by phone conference, twice a year in person, and even more often by email as we prepare for our monthly call. We currently have 25 pathways that cover about 95% of the cancers that occur in a community setting. To keep pathways up to date, McKesson supports us with five PharmDs who continually mine the literature to determine what could be pertinent to our pathways and whether it’s practice changing for us to review.
It is a huge undertaking to keep these pathways current. I give credit to the physicians who are on the committee, and I give credit to McKesson for providing the substantial support, both with personnel and with technology, to keep them up-to-date.