74 Background: Oncologists have expertise in the work-up and management of patients with a suspected diagnosis of cancer. Patients diagnosed with cancer during acute care hospitalization often have poorer outcomes than those diagnosed as outpatients. For these patients, time to appropriate cancer diagnosis, management of cancer-related symptoms, and timely initiation of treatment are key to improved outcomes. Outpatient new diagnosis clinics may improve patient outcomes by improving access to subspecialty care. Methods: Patients seen by the inpatient oncology consult service over a two-month period (8/1/23-8/31/23 and 10/1/23-10/31/23) were included in this analysis. Inpatient management of disease was defined as an invasive procedure to treat the disease or a complication of the disease, initiation of systemic anti-neoplastic treatment, or radiation therapy. Surveys regarding perceived barriers to timely outpatient oncology care were distributed to oncology fellows and attendings. A Diagnostic Oncology Clinic (DOC) was started 2/1/2024 with the goal to decrease time to first outpatient oncology by a median of 12 days to less than 10 days, decrease hospital length of stay (LOS), improve outpatient management of cancer related symptoms, and improve time to treatment. Results: A total of 95 patients were evaluated. 74 (78%) of patients had a new diagnosis of cancer. Most patients had gastrointestinal cancer (n = 40, 42%) or thoracic cancer (n = 24, 25%). 51 patients (53.7%) had metastatic disease. 48 patients (50.5%) had an ECOG performance status of 0 or 1 at the time of consultation. The median hospital LOS was 11 days (IQR, 5-19). 13 patients (13.7%) had an inpatient PET scan and 43 patients (45.3%) required inpatient management of their disease or disease-related complication. 57 patients (60%) were discharged home, 21 (22%) to an extended care facility, and 17 (18%) expired or transitioned to hospice. 35 patients (37%) were seen as new outpatients with a median time to visit of 12 days (IQR 7-20). The median time to initiation of anti-neoplastic therapy as an outpatient was 24 days (IQR 18-33). There were 29 survey respondents corresponding to a response rate of 69%. 16 (55%) felt that about half the time or less patients will have timely follow-up with an oncologist after discharge, and 19 (65%) felt half the time or less patients will have appropriate cancer-related symptom management after discharge. Conclusions: Most patients seen by the inpatient oncology consult service with a new diagnosis of cancer have advanced and symptomatic disease. Historically, there has been significant time to outpatient care and cancer-specific management led by an oncologist. Creation of a diagnostic oncology clinic may shift some diagnostic testing and symptom management from the inpatient to outpatient setting, decrease time to first outpatient visit, and improve provider workflow for a vulnerable patient population. Analysis of this intervention is ongoing.