Abstract

e18195 Background: MMC have traditionally evaluated pt management and potential areas for quality improvement. We hypothesized that this approach could be adapted and extrapolated to gain increased insight into how pts with common solid tumors are being treated in general oncology practice and how the approaches used align with evidence-based guidelines. Methods: 102 randomly recruited US-based general medical oncologists from a proprietary database of 4,019 agreed to consult their medical records and provide information on biomarkers assessed, systemic therapies administered and other treatment-related factors for the last pt in their practice to die from OC, CRC and/or WTLC. An IRB exemption was obtained and a modest honorarium was provided. Results: Pts with OC, CRC and WTLC received a median of 3, 3 and 2 lines of therapy, respectively, the majority of which were supported by guidelines, but in more than half of cases, the regimen administered required dose adjustment/discontinuation due to toxicity. Less than half of pts were offered trial participation and only 15 (6%) entered a trial. 19 pts with OC (25%), 25 pts with CRC (32%) and 58 pts with WTLC (73%) did not undergo BRCA, MSI and multiplex genomic testing, respectively, despite the recommendation of available guidelines. Conclusions: The MMC model may be an effective means to document variability as well as consistency in current oncologic care. Data generated via this assessment juxtaposed with current clinical evidence and available guideline recommendations could potentially serve as a powerful educational intervention. These findings require additional validation but provide initial support for future iterations of this exercise. [Table: see text]

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