Abstract

111 Background: Diagnosing and treating more than 56,000 Veterans annually, the Veterans Affairs (VA) National Oncology Program (NOP) is one of the nation’s largest integrated providers of oncology services. Within VA, oncology care and parenteral therapies are primarily offered at VA Medical Centers (VAMCs) in urban areas, often inaccessible to rural patients. Issues with travel distance, parking, time, and caregiver support can prevent patients from adhering to treatment appointments as evidenced by historical annual No-Show rates for VAMC infusion clinics that range from 1.1-6.7%. To mitigate potential barriers to access, NOP launched the Close to Me (CTM) cancer care service. The service deploys Registered Nurses (RNs) to local VA Community Based Outpatient Clinics (CBOCs) to administer cancer treatments. VA has opened 23 CTM clinics across 5 geographical regions since October 2021. Methods: The CTM service was implemented at VAMCs with NOP providing direct project management, safety assessment and resources such as a comprehensive implementation toolkit, standard operating procedures, care coordination tools, a tiered risk drug matrix and a standardized Healthcare Failure Mode and Effect Analysis risk evaluation. RNs followed a standardized workflow to assess patient eligibility and verify treatment clearances. Access to care was reported by numbers of unique patients and treatment visits. Patient appointment adherence was monitored by no-show rates documented in the electronic health record. Infusion reactions and medical emergencies were reported by RNs. Travel miles saved was calculated by subtracting the difference in miles round trip from the patient’s home to main VAMC and from home to CBOC, then multiplied by number of treatment visits to CBOC. Results: From October 2021 through April 2024, 23 new CTM clinics opened across 5 regions. 515 unique patients were enrolled for a total of 1,916 patient visits. Treatment appointment no-show rate was 1% across all CTM clinics. The most commonly administered medication classes include gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (30%), immune globulin (14.5%), immune checkpoint inhibitors (9.3%) and bisphosphonates (8.3%). Zero infusion reactions or medical emergencies were recorded across 1,430 treatments administered. A total of 204,000 travel miles were saved by patients enrolled in this program. Conclusions: The CTM cancer care service safely optimizes current VA CBOC infrastructure to increase access points to oncology treatment for patients across various geographical regions. CTM reduced travel burden for patients and increased ability to adhere to treatment appointments as evidenced by the service’s low no-show rate. These consistent results across CTM services at VAMCs nationwide have cemented CTM as a safe and effective treatment delivery model to expand access. CTM will be scaled to an additional 30 regions by end of 2025.

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