Optimal adjuvant endocrine therapy use in breast cancer remains elusive
MACRA may boost outcomes
In an interview, Dr. Daly said he believes the coming changes with respect to value-based reimbursement will indeed have an important impact on outcomes.
“The oncology care model, for example, mandates that physicians document that they are providing guideline-concordant care,” said Dr. Daly, assistant attending physician at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. “There are also new technologies such as oncology clinical pathways ... that also try to ensure that all patients are receiving care according to guidelines.”
Further, the increasing use of team-based approaches to care and the incorporation of “tumor boards” might explain the growth in optimal AET usage seen in this cohort.
,Dr. Daly said he was surprised to find that certain patient groups were being left behind, such as those with estrogen receptor-negative/progesterone receptor-positive disease, African American patients, and younger and older patients, who were less likely to receive AET.
“I think that helps us also focus on patient populations we can target to make sure they are receiving optimal care,” he said, stressing that the findings have important policy implications for figuring out why those patients are being left behind, and raising the standard of care for all patients.
“We are making great strides to providing appropriate guideline-concordant care for breast cancer patients, but there’s still room to improve,” he said.
Dr. Daly serves as a director of and receives compensation from Quadrant Holdings. Frontline Medical News is a subsidiary of Quadrant Holdings. Dr. Daly also reported financial relationships with CVS Health, Johnson & Johnson, McKesson, and Walgreens Boots Alliance.