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VALUE IN ONCOLOGY PROBLEMS, SOLUTIONS & AN EXPERIMENT Derek Raghavan MD PhD FACP FRACP FASCO President, Levine Cancer Institute ASSOCIATION OF CANCER EXECUTIVES, January 2014 PHILOSOPHY OF CANCER TREATMENT Cure when possible Maximize length and quality of life Pioneering in science • Laboratory to clinic • Clinic to laboratory Care of the patient and family Rationalize costs when possible and ethically sound l 1 LET’S START WITH HEALTH CARE IN GENERAL IN THE U.S.A. WHAT ARE THE KEY PROBLEMS THAT RELATE TO ONCOLOGY? HEALTH CARE: THE GOVERNMENT SHELL GAME The U.S. population has “expectations” for health care Nobody is interested in health care unless illness involves them – patients, families, friends (somewhat) Governments cannot afford to provide the care that the population expects NOBODY wants to pay for health care Lobbyists lobby Why did the Oregon experiment fail????? A SHARED RESPONSIBILITY The population and health behavior – smoking, obesity Death is an un-American activity The medical profession – profits, fear of litigation, lobbying The pharmaceutical industry – profits, lobbying Politicians The legal profession – profits, lobbying, stirring the pot Health Care Spending by Country Percent of GDP (2008) Source: 2008 Data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. 7 Factors Influencing Oncology Practice Community expectations Government – Legislation – General, the press – Funding for Research – Specific, patient satisfaction – Payment for services/Medicare/etc. Trajectory of change of outcomes – Government as a provider Reimbursement changes Pace of the science Multiplicity of clinician constituencies Learned Societies • Payers/Insurers • Employers Organized Research Groups Advocacy Organizations Changing Demographics 8 Community Expectations The Press – cancer a “hot” topic Leapfrog, Press Ganey & clones – patient surveys “War on Cancer” generated false expectations, regularly revised as false expectations Conflicts of interest in government evaluations Health Policy “experts” Driven by politicians Influence of advocacy groups Driven by experts with/ without skin in the game • Dartmouth • Ethicists • Tension between science and opinion? • Influence of opinion leaders 9 Community Expectations The Press – cancer a “hot” topic Leapfrog, Press Gainey & clones “War on Cancer” generated false expectations, regularly revised as false expectations Conflicts of interest in government evaluations Health Policy experts Driven by politicians Influence of advocacy groups Driven by experts with/ without skin in the game • Dartmouth • Ethicists • Tension between science and opinion? • Influence of opinion leaders 10 What’s the deal in NH? What’s up in LA? 11 What’s The Story in NH and LA NH: LA: • Small area • Poverty • Educated • Large state • Fewer indigent • Poor access • High density academics • Poor education • High density proximate hospitals • African American cultural issues • Dartmouth engineers of healthcare • Targeting of advertisers • Work conditions • Work conditions • Liberal state • Conservative state 5 WORST STATES FOR HEALTH INSURANCE TEXAS NEVADA ALASKA (“I can see Russia from my kitchen!” Tina Fey 2008) FLORIDA GEORGIA 13 14 Don’t Forget the Centers that “Skim” Medicare Medicaid Need Not Apply!!! Strategy for Health Plans (Porter & Teisberg, 2006) Provide health information and support to patients/physicians • Organize around medical conditions, not geography or administrative functions • Provide comprehensive disease management/prevention services for all members, healthy or unhealthy • Provide information and transparency regarding outcomes Restructure the health plan – provider relationship • Reward excellence/innovation Redefine the health plan – subscriber relationship • End cost-shifting practices 16 BOTTOM LINE OF A SENSIBLE APPROACH PARTNERSHIP INVOLVE KEY STAKE HOLDERS FUNCTIONALLY DRIVEN COMPREHENSIVE TRANSPARENT REWARD EXCELLENCE 17 Government Remember those little politicians!! Consumer – Federal Examples: • NCI – State – Regulates research – Local – Regulates centers Payer – Funds research – Funds cooperative groups Research Regulator – Does research • FDA 18 Trajectory of Change of Outcomes vs Expectations Changing Endpoints • Survival • Quality of life “Hype” Institutional advertorials Meetings & abstracts • Cost • Patient satisfaction • Molecular targets Real progress • Peer reviewed publication • National survival statistics • (Not well connected to community expectation) 19 Proposed Strategic Approach to Cut Health Care Costs Stay on top of the science Integrate clinical trials with rational design and careful costing Manage across the system • Porter & Teisburg • Avoid skimming Rational selection of treatment: • Outcomes should drive • Strong scientific rationale • Structured palliative care Measure and present robust outcome data Reduce unnecessary tests Listen to the lay evaluations, but structure them carefully Blue ocean/Red ocean strategy Don’t listen to everyone 20 My Strategy Physicians and bio-medical organizations reduce costs Address tort reform in a meaningful way – costs to system are VASTLY under-estimated Provide a safety net – especially for chronic disease and those who run out of health insurance Improve access Re-educate the community about realistic expectations Require training for those who tinker with the system Reward excellence Transparency Refine costs of biomedical development SO…Where does Levine Cancer Institute fit? Addressing costs and inconvenience of care Attracting new expertise to the region Bringing research to this area A new model of patient support Standardization and evidence based approaches Symmetrical care across the Carolinas – for everyone! 22 23 INITIAL CONCEPT: VISION STATEMENT The Levine Cancer Institute will be recognized by cancer patients and their families, referring physicians, and the communities we serve as the “first choice” provider in the Carolinas and the Southeast, and further renowned as one of the premier cancer care providers in the country. Unified cancer network – concept of “ONE-ness” in 2011 personalized service high quality outcomes Clinical trials and access to research/screening/navigation/palliative services Collaboration enterprise-wide to Enhanced quality Enhanced access Each CHS patient entry point will be a portal into a network of specialized services Incorporation of translational research NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL presence 24 Our Vision – Changing the Course of Cancer Care Unified enterprise-wide network Spread across two states Patient-centered Connected across the enterprise Clinically integrated Best-practice collaboration across the enterprise 25 Structure for Enterprise Engagement & Collaboration May 13,2011 Enterprise Summits 2x/Year Education, Networking/Team Building Enterprise Cancer Strategy Council Quarterly Launch by May 2011 Coordination of Enterprise Cancer Initiatives Launching March-April,2011 Monthly Charlotte Regional Cancer Strategy Council Western Regional Cancer Strategy Council Lowcountry Regional Cancer Strategy Council Upstate Regional Cancer Strategy Council Tumor Site Team Quality Council Market Development, Regional Tumor Site Planning & Development Algorithm Developed by “Oncology Solutions” 26 Levine Cancer Institute: Charter Members An-Med, Anderson SC Northeast Hospital, Concord NC Blue Ridge, Valdese NC Pineville Hospital, Pineville NC Carolinas Medical Center Roper St Francis Hospital, Charleston SC Cleveland Regional Medical Center, Shelby NC Stanly Regional Medical Center, Albemarle NC Lincolnton Hospital University Hospital, Charlotte NC Mercy Hospital, Charlotte NC Union Hospital, Monroe NC 27 Levine Cancer Institute Membership Criteria Central IRB – Chesapeake Clinical trials infrastructure Local 0.1 FTE leader Staff participation in tumor boards/conferences Participation in survivorship programs E-treatment pathways Complementary/integrative cancer medicine program Patient Navigation E-genetic counseling SOP’s and quality Disparities program 28 Recruitment 100+ thus far • 50 locally • 50 nationally Academic programs – clinician investigators Clinical programs Moving from general to sub-specialty practice Integration of staff – no second-class citizens 29 PROGRAMS INNOVATIONS IN PROGRESS 30 31 Stage IV OR unresectable Stage III Distant metastatic disease OR UNresectable Stage III • • • • Biopsy of distant disease LDH CT C/A/P & MRI brain OR PET/CT Path for BRAF mutation Melanoma Edward S. Kim, MD Chair, Solid Tumor Oncology Treatment “Monthly Section Meetings” Patients should be considered for multidisciplinary discussion to determine potential for surgical resection ECOG 1609 Adj Ipi vs IFN Surgical Resection Resectable Trial NEEDED BRAF Not an IL-2 candidate Without brain metastases Clinical Trial Ipilimumab Chemotherapy PROCLAIM Registry Clinical Trial Ipilimumab BRAF inhibition Chemotherapy SELECT DFCI Phase II BMS BRAF + IL-2 Candidate Disseminated (Unresectable) See Followup Stage IV NED BRAF - SRS +/- WBRT BRAF + Clinical trial or Observation With brain metastases Phase II Roche MO25743 33 Survivorship Survivorship Program • Identification via Tumor Registry and Physicians • Structured algorithms • Engagement of medical staff of system hospitals & practices • Engagement of key physicians for patients • Administrative system-wide structure • Examples: – Long term survivor after radiotherapy for breast cancer – Long term survivor after chemotherapy for metastatic testis cancer – Psychological issues – Kids who are now grown-up’s 34 Levine Oncology Program for Seniors • Years 3-4 • Geriatrician in place & support base in development • Specific oncology personnel – Daniel Haggstrom MD, Raghava Induru MD • Established track record of published data • Focus on the WELL-ELDERLY • Based at Mercy Hospital and Stanly Hospital 35 Cancer Flying Squad • Led by Dennis Devereux MD (Stanly) & Mike Lutes (Union) • Sub-specialty home services • Building towards home chemo/tumor measurements/transfusion • Helps with early discharge • Reduces Average Length of Stay • Reduces re-admissions • Sensible fiscal model – patients who won’t come to hospital • The right thing to do 36 Integrative Cancer Medicine Program • Leadership: Chasse Bailey-Dorton MD, Wendy Brick MD (in future?) • Structured studies • Broad options – music therapy, art therapy, diet, etc. • Provision of accurate information • De-criminalization for up to 50% • Clinical trials • Education for patients on early phase trials • Pastoral Care Academy – David Carl – 25 CHS pastors, October 2012 Evolution, 2012-2013 12 Levine Cancer Institute participating groups Treatment pathways/protocols Administrative team in place Phase I clinical trials unit(s) in progress Phase II clinical trials – based throughout CHS Academic leadership identified Cancer pharmacology lab team HOT lab Tumor Specific Teams Hem/Onc fellowship planning Educational courses Cancer Emergency Dept Network Leadership at Roper/St Francis Survivorship initiatives Navigator Academies 1 and 2 Patient satisfaction/value/cost Single Tumor Registry 38 Potential Impact of Levine Cancer Institute (work-in-progress) Care near home – less travel, accomodation, time Evidence-based standard approaches Optimal support – navigation, survivorship E-genetic counseling Focused cancer research and clinical trials Resources spread through the system – ALL patients Electronic support – tumor boards, video conferences, access Cost Containment – Broader Efforts 40 EXPERIMENT: ARE THE FOLLOWING IMPROVED? QUALITY • via standardized, evidence based pathways • System-wide tumor conferences, education, pathway design • System approach to drug shortages IMPROVED COST • via pathways, trials, access, less travel • Integrated selection of palliative/supportive care • Trial selection linked to clinical practice section policy 41 Early Evidence Press Ganey – 99% System-Wide for LCI Commission on Cancer – 8 programs, all with max. merit QOPI External Advisory Board – no concerns 42 Proposed Strategic Approach to Address Health Care Costs Stay on top of the science Integrate clinical trials with rational design and careful costing Manage across the system • Porter & Teisburg • Avoid skimming Rational selection of treatment: • Outcomes should drive • Strong scientific rationale • Structured palliative care Measure and present robust outcome data Reduce unnecessary costs Listen to the lay evaluations, but structure them carefully Blue ocean/Red ocean strategy Don’t listen to everyone 43