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MAI Mindset

Pathways Are Now a Popular Tool for Organizations Delivering Cancer Care

August 2024

J Clin Pathways. 2024;10(4):18-20.

Key Points

  • Many provider organizations seek to improve their clinical and economic outcomes by reducing variation in treatment selection for patients with cancer.

  • Since 2019, HMP Market Access Insights has studied the prevalence of cancer drug management programs including pathways, integrated delivery networks’ (IDNs’) oncology programs, and community groups as part of our ongoing, multiyear studies of oncology providers and payers.

    • Participants in our 2024 research program included oncology pharmacists and oncologists in 147 IDNs, as well as medical oncologists and practice managers representing 124 community oncology practices.

  • We also examined pathways’ influence and impact on oncologists’ treatment decisions by conducting a unique two-arm study with 130 oncologists using advanced conjoint analysis in Q4 2023; we have previously shared results in the Journal of Clinical Pathways from that study.1-3

  • This column focuses on the reported prevalence of provider-implemented pathways in provider organizations and their association with other internal structures and processes within a wide range of organizations providing treatment to patients with cancer.

Background

Clinical pathways are evidence-based guidelines that aim to im­prove the quality and efficiency of health care delivery. They can help to standardize treatment protocols, reduce variation in care, and improve patient outcomes. HMP Market Access Insights (MAI) examined the prevalence of clinical pathways in oncology care and commonalities in implementation.

Clinical pathways are evidence-based guidelines that aim to im­prove the quality and efficiency of health care delivery. They can help to standardize treatment protocols, reduce variation in care, and improve patient outcomes. HMP Market Access Insights (MAI) examined the prevalence of clinical pathways in oncology care and commonalities in implementation.

HMP MAI will conduct additional research in 2024 focused exclusively on providing further insights regarding the actual impact of pathway programs on treatment selections, but this column examines additional details of our provider studies, including the prevalence of pathway programs in integrated delivery networks (IDNs) and community oncology groups.

2024 Research Highlights

  • Provider pathways are most frequently implemented in provider settings with centralized organizational structures, including a robust set of oncology management tools (and an IT system to support such tools) and active clinical management committees.
  • Pathways may also be found in smaller IDNs and independent community oncology groups, where the leading physicians have committed to reducing variation and providing guidance to ensure the use of best prescribing practices.
  • While some providers develop and maintain unique pathways, many rely on external organizations. Such programs implemented by providers in our research included ClinicalPath by Elsevier, McKesson’s Value Pathways, and Dana-Farber Pathways.

Overall Prevalence Among Oncology Providers

A substantial share of provider organizations have adopted some form of clinical pathway programs to encourage provid­ers to adhere to organization-wide best prescribing standards, although the prevalence varies between IDNs and community practices (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Highest Level of Control on Oncologist Prescribing

Prevalence is Most Common in Highly Integrated Provider Organizations

Many IDN-based and community-based organizations contin­ue to rely on National Comprehensive Care Network (NCCN) guidelines and/or US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approvals as guidance, or they allow physicians to prescribe any product on their formularies freely. While the overall share of organizations with pathways appears to reflect widespread influence, two issues constrain their current impact:

  1. Implementation is most frequently limited to sophisticated organizations with strong central committee structures seeking to develop and implement network-wide tools; and
  2. Even where a provider organization has implemented a pathway program, the organization’s leadership may not be actively monitoring oncologists’ adherence.

Pathways are most prevalent among the largest and most centralized organizations, including highly integrated IDNs and community oncology groups that are members of the US Oncology and OneOncology networks (Figure 2a).

Figure 2. Pathway Prevalence

Pathways are relatively common in IDNs’ cancer programs in highly integrated, large organizations with an academic medical center (AMC) or teaching hospital in their networks. Implementation within these networks appears increasingly consistent, with 77% of respondents with a pathway pro­gram reporting that their institutions rolled out the program across their entire network. Discussions with oncologists and pharmacists over many years suggest that while a path­way may be in place in an AMC, compliance is expected and monitored primarily among non–key opinion leader (KOL) oncologists practicing in on- and off-campus settings, while KOLs focus on trial enrollment and see more complicated and rare cases for whom a pathway is unlikely to exist.

While the percentage of IDNs implementing a pathways program across their networks has increased, almost a quarter (23%) report a limited rollout, meaning the full impact of path­ways remains to be seen. The sprawling geographic footprint of some large, multiregional IDNs creates additional complexities, as some regions may lack the basic infrastructure or physician cultures required to implement a pathways program successfully.

Prevalence among community groups is also concentrated in the two largest networks in which all responding practices reported both use and, generally, high adherence with a for­mal pathway program (Figure 2b). Independent groups are more likely to focus on NCCN guidelines or allow complete prescribing autonomy constrained only by payers’ reimburse­ment policies or the group’s formulary.

While adherence is reportedly high, monitoring is incon­sistent. Most pathway programs seek to achieve adherence rates between 70% and 90%. Our research finds that a sizeable minority of provider organizations do not monitor oncolo­gists’ compliance with pathway programs that have been rolled out (Figure 3).

Figure 3. Percent of Organizations With Pathways that Monitor Adherence

Monitoring is a key factor contributing to high levels of adherence. Our earlier pathway study found that adherence monitoring encourages oncologists to reference pathways dur­ing the treatment selection process, even without any system­atic rewards or punishments for adherence.

Conclusion

For several years, HMP MAI’s oncology provider studies have found a rising prevalence of pathways in both IDNs and community groups. Organizations with centralized structures and a strong commitment to quality through prescribing according to best practices were more likely to have implemented pathways, to have rolled them out across all sites, and to encourage adherence through comprehensive monitoring. Our 2024 pathway research program seeks to develop increasing insights into physicians’ motivations and approaches to using pathways.

References

1. Blansett L. December 2023 pathways impact study part 1: awareness and influen­cers of use. J Clin Pathways. 2024;10(1)10-12.

2. Blansett L. December 2023 pathways impact study part 2: impact of pathways programs on treatment selection. J Clin Pathways. 2024;10(2):3-5.

3. Blansett L. December 2023 pathways impact study part 3: importance of “on-pathway” status for treatment selection. J Clin Pathways. 2024;10(3):20-22.

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