Aim: To assess the implementation of an electronic patient reported outcomes (ePRO) application across a multi-center radiation oncology department. Process: Dalhousie University's Department of Radiation Oncology (DRO) is composed of four radiotherapy (RT) centres (Halifax, Sydney, Saint John, Charlottetown) across three provinces. The implementation of ePRO across our centres has been made possible by several key events: In 2009, a Canadian Partnership Against Cancer (CPAC) grant enabled 2 centres to begin paper-based distress screening using the Canadian Problem Checklist (CPC) and Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESASr). In 2015, a PRO retreat included representatives from all 4 centres to devise an action plan for ePRO implementation. In 2017, Accreditation Canada mandated routine evaluation of patient outcomes and in 2019, three DRO centres were awarded CPAC funding to launch ePROs. The fourth centre now hopes to use lessons learned in order to facilitate their ePRO implementation. Within the ePRO application (Noona) Canadian Partnership for Quality Radiotherapy (CPQR)-endorsed PRO tools are used to capture patient responses including CPC, ESASr, and the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI). Needs assessments were conducted in the areas of human resource (e.g. administrative support) as well as staff and patient education. Clinic workflows were revised to include an ePRO assessment at consultation, first and last RT review as well as follow-up in clinic or remotely. Official roll-out began in November 2021 with a phased approach across centres and tumors sites to allow for stakeholder and user feedback and to facilitate continued project planning. Benefits/Chellenges: Multi-centre and multi-disciplinary collaboration has been a major enabler of this project with significant potential to expand our Department's clinical and research programs. While the challenge of coordinating such a large-scale initiative was aggravated by constantly changing pandemic restrictions, project priority was escalated across the institutions with recognition of the electronic platform as a powerful tool to assess patient distress/symptoms remotely. While implementation of an ePRO program has been feasible, it has also been complex. Approvals from Privacy Impact Assessments to IT architectural reviews were required. An advisory board was formed to facilitate multi-stakeholder feedback including patient representatives, project managers, clinical clerks, nurses, radiation therapists, radiation oncologists, industry representatives, IT and legal. The project has been dependent on support from cancer program leadership to front line staff. Given that implementation of an ePRO application has introduced change in clinic workflow, change management strategies have been required to obtain buy-in for a system that aims to ultimately improve the quality and efficiency of patient care. Impact / Outcomes: PROs capture the patient perspective on physical, emotional and practical impacts of treatment, with the literature showing benefits to include improved patient-provider communication, patient quality of life and even survival. Future evaluation of the program will hopefully confirm that uptake and efficiency of PROs improves with use of the electronic versus paper system. More importantly, we await data collection and analysis to determine whether our multiple RT centres see improved patient outcomes through use of ePROs.
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