Abstract

265 Background: Adherence to oral chemotherapy (OC) is a critical factor in achieving optimal oncologic outcomes. Correct dosing, education, and symptom management are essential to maximizing adherence. As part of the 2020 Quality Oncology Practice Initiative Certification Program Fox Chase Cancer Center (FCCC), a NCCN Comprehensive Cancer Center, learned that only 33% of patients on OC had a documented OC plan, 7% were assessed for adherence, and 0% had documentation reflecting efforts to address non-adherence. Methods: Our goal was to create and implement an electronic medical record (EMR) tool (Oral Chemo Smart Form) to address the variance and deficiencies in monitoring adherence to OC. The Smart Form (SF) was designed to include fields to document the OC plan (drug, indication, dose, schedule, duration of cycle, initial start/end date) as well as provide a standard for documentation of education, management of toxicity and non-adherence. We integrated the SF into nursing, pharmacy, and physician workflows to capitalize on shared EMR tools. A series of Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles were conducted over 8 weeks within pilot clinics. Weekly review of the SF and feedback forms generated real-time progress reports which were serially appraised and shared with stakeholders. Results: Two oncologists (piloted in Genitourinary and Breast Cancer clinics), two pharmacists, and several nurses used the SF March 15, 2021 to May 7, 2021. Over these 8 weeks, 223 patients on OC were seen in clinic. If the OC was dispensed from FCCC, pharmacists were to complete the SF at the time of initial OC prescription, 7 days after dispensing, and with each refill. Pharmacists also identified patients receiving OC through a specialty pharmacy and routed a message to clinic nurses via an EMR message pool. The message became the trigger for nurses to call patients within two weeks to troubleshoot dispensing issues and/or complete the SF. Oncologists were to complete the SF with each clinic visit for a patient on OC. Feedback from the clinical and pharmacy teams motivated changes in the content fields of the SF and workflow. Ultimately, 45% of patients on OC had the SF completed. An OC plan was documented in 41% of patients, compared to 33% at baseline; 87% had an administration schedule compared to 81%. There was an increase in the number of patients contacted following start of OC, 35% from 4%. Medication adherence was assessed in 35% of patients, up from 7%. Documented discussions addressing medication adherence increased to 78%, from 0%. Conclusions: Introduction of the Oral Chemo SF in pilot clinics improved documented OC plans and administration schedules. Its use introduced a standard process for monitoring safety, assessing and addressing non-adherence, while troubleshooting specialty pharmacy dispensing issues. The SF will be implemented throughout FCCC and further evaluated with efforts focused on adopting and streamlining this as standard work.

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