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Building Quality Improvement Initiatives through Anti-Cancer Stewardship in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA): CML Pilot

The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Pharmacy Benefits Management (PBM) Services created a national stewardship with focus on anti-cancer therapeutics within a disease-specific cohort . Directing stewardship initiatives to a cohort of Veterans with a common malignancy is a novel approach. A multi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Blood 2023-11, Vol.142 (Supplement 1), p.3721-3721
Main Authors: Ribeiro, Maria-Jose, McClelland, Samantha, Duvel, James, Geraci, Mark, Leslie, Donna, Laplant, Kourtney D, Tague, Marshall, Heron, Bernadette B.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Pharmacy Benefits Management (PBM) Services created a national stewardship with focus on anti-cancer therapeutics within a disease-specific cohort . Directing stewardship initiatives to a cohort of Veterans with a common malignancy is a novel approach. A multidisciplinary team with National PBM and VISNs (Veterans Integrated Service Network) promotes standardization of practice with accountability to monitor outcomes as a continual quality improvement process. A toolkit was built to support stewardship activities and includes: •near-real-time process to identify a national disease-specific Veteran cohort•disease validation process•centralized MUE data collection•educational resources•site for communication and training materials Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors (TKIs) account for the second highest utilization among outpatient oral anti-cancer therapies in VHA . Imatinib has demonstrated persistent efficacy and is the preferred TKI on the VA National Formulary. Utilizing our toolkit, we developed two MUEs for our national CML cohort to determine why Veterans were not prescribed imatinib as 1L therapy and reasons for switching from first to second line therapy. Methods Business rules identified VISN CML cohorts by using data sources and diagnostic coding from the VA Electronic Health Record (EHR): primary care and hematology/oncology visits (ICD-10), inpatient stays (ICD-10), and problem lists (ICD-10; SNOMED CT). Retrospective chart review of two subsets: Veterans who received a drug other than imatinib as their initial VA prescriptionVeterans who received at least two unique drugs to treat CML Data abstracted for MUE #1: •Disposition of TKI prescription•If new initiation, documented reason(s) for drug selection•If continuation, prior drug therapy history Data abstracted for MUE #2: •Documented reason(s) for switch to 2L•If adverse drug reaction (ADR) included as a reason, is it documented in the EHR? Analysis combined responses with prescription data from the EHR. Results Of the 18 VISNs, 9 participated in MUE data collection. 365 patients were identified as not having received imatinib 1L and 360 were identified as having received at least two unique drugs to treat CML. These counts are each approximately 30% of the total CML patient cohort. In the total cohort, ~50% of patients received imatinib 1L and have not switched to 2L. Responses for 1L TKI therapy (N=365) •199 (55%) continued therapy originally started outside V
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood-2023-182240