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APIII

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Title: APIII


1
Establishing Indicators for Cancer CareThe
Role of the Cancer Registry and Other Oncology
Data Sources
  • Presented by
  • Sharon Winters
  • Director, Registry Information Services
  • UPMC Cancer Centers
  • winterssb_at_upmc.edu
  • (412) 647-6390

2
Session Objectives
  • Understand the history of Pay for Performance
    initiatives
  • Identify organizations dedicated to the
    evaluation of quality of care indicators
  • Identify electronic medical data sources being
    used to evaluate these indicators
  • Create an open forum for discussion of how
    pathology, cancer registry and other clinical
    applications can continue to play key roles

3
Session Outline
  • Identify the difference between Quality of Care
    vs. Pay for Performance
  • Brief review of Healthcare expenditures
  • Identify organizations dedicated to the
    evaluation of quality care indicators
  • Specific focus on oncology care
  • Understand the history of Pay for Performance
    initiatives
  • Identify indicators accepted by the National
    Quality Forum and CMS
  • Identify electronic medical data sources being
    used to evaluate these indicators
  • Discussion

4
Quality Management
  • A method for ensuring that all activities
    necessary to design, develop and implement a
    product or service are effective with respect to
    the system and its performance.
  • Three main components
  • Quality Control
  • Quality Assurance
  • Quality Improvement

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality_improvement
5
What is meant by Quality of Care?
  • The degree to which health services for
    individuals and populations increase the
    likelihood of desired health outcomes and are
    consistent with current professional knowledge.
  • U.S. Institutes of Medicine (IOM)
  • Each individual consumer should receive the best
    possible health care available every time
    services are needed.
  • Health care providers should provide care that
    meets the needs of each individual patient,
    including the use of appropriate advances in
    medical technology.
  • Healthcare should also be non-discriminatory,
    providing the same quality of service regardless
    of race, ethnicity, age, sex or health status.

http//www.medicareadvocacy.org/
http//www.iom.edu/
6
Whats in a Name?
  • Quality Management
  • Quality Assurance
  • Continuous Process Improvement
  • Total Quality Improvement
  • Clinical Indicators of Care
  • Quality Indicators of Care
  • Clinical Pathways
  • Incorporating multidisciplinary approach to
    surgical oncology, medical oncology, radiation
    oncology and clinical therapeutic trials

http//www.oncbiz.com/documents/OBRJA07_Pathways.p
df
7
The Cost of Health CareIncreasing Overall NHE
1960-2006
8
The Cost of Health CarePercent by Type of
Service 1994 vs. 2004
9
Pay for Performance (P4P)
  • Insurance companies, large corporations providing
    health benefits to their employees, Medicare, and
    other healthcare purchasers are looking to
    improve the quality of healthcare and control
    costs by changing the way they pay for healthcare
  • paying doctors, hospitals, and other providers
    more for high quality care, and less for poor
    quality care

10
The Organizationsor shall we say, the acronyms?
  • Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
    Organizations (JCAHO)
  • Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
  • National Quality Forum (NQF)
  • US Department of Health and Human Services
    (USDHHS)
  • Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
  • National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN)
  • American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
  • American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer
    (ACoS CoC)
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
  • American Medical Association (AMA)
  • College of American Pathologists (CAP)
  • American Cancer Society (ACS)
  • Center for Health Care Strategies (CHCS)
  • Insurance Companies
  • State Specific Initiatives
  • Quality Insights of Pennsylvania
  • Pennsylvania Cancer Control Consortium (PAC3)
  • Pittsburgh Regional Health Initiative (PRHI)
  • Disease-specific organizations

11
Reportable Cases by Insurance Type2000-2007
86 of cancer care is covered by
Medicare/Medicaid and Private Insurance
Source UPMC Network Cancer Registry Via
Hospital billing systems
12
Cancer Care Indicators and P4P Recent History
  • 1999 Institute of Medicine report Ensuring
    Quality Cancer Care
  • Revealed lack of info on the quality of cancer
    care
  • Recommended development of better measures and
    data to support evaluation
  • In response, NCI teams up with several agencies
    to contract with the National Quality Forum (NQF)
  • Agency for Health Care Research and Quality
    (AHRQ)
  • Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
  • Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
  • 2004 American College of Surgeons supports use
    of NCCN and ASCO benchmark guidelines for breast
    and colorectal cancers
  • 2004 and 2005 NQF announces call for breast and
    colorectal measures
  • NQF contracts with the American College of
    Surgeons Commission on Cancer

13
Cancer Care Indicators and P4P Recent History
(Continued)
  • January 2005 Medicare (CMS) releases Pay for
    Performance Initiatives (P4P) this is working
    its way into cancer care
  • Linking level of payment to reporting of quality
    measures
  • Some initiatives also provide for bonus
    payments
  • 2 above standard DRG payment for facilities
    scoring in the top 10 of highest quality
  • 1 above standard DRG payment for next highest
    10
  • April 2007 NQF Endorses American College of
    Surgeons Commission on Cancer (CoC) Measures for
    Cancer Care of Breast and Colorectal Cancers
  • Out of 8 measures proposed by the CoC, 5 measures
    met the requirements of the NQF Steering
    Committee
  • 3 for breast cancer
  • 2 for colon cancers

14
Pay for Performance MeasuresConditions for
Consideration
  • Be in a public domain or have a signed
    intellectual property (IP) agreement to make open
    source
  • Have an identified responsible entity and process
    to maintain and update the measure
  • Be intended for both public reporting and quality
    improvement
  • Be fully developed and tested so that all
    evaluation criteria have been addressed and
    information needed to evaluate the measure is
    provided

http//www.qualityforum.org/
15
NQF, ASCO/NCCN and CoC Adopted Indicators
Breast Cancer 1
  • Radiation therapy is administered within 1 year
    (365 days) of initial diagnosis for women under
    the age of 70 receiving breast conserving surgery
    for breast cancer. Denominator includes
  • Gender women
  • Age at dx 18-69 at time of diagnosis
  • Known or assumed first or only cancer diagnosis
  • Primary breast tumors
  • Epithelial invasive tumors
  • AJCC stage I, II or III
  • BC Surgery excision less than mastectomy
  • All or part of the first course of tx performed
    at reporting facility
  • Known to be alive within 1 year (365 days of dx)

16
NQF, ASCO/NCCN and CoC Adopted Indicators
Breast Cancer 2
  • Chemotherapy is considered or administered within
    4 months (120 days) of diagnosis for women under
    70 with AJCC T1cN0M0 or Stage II/III hormone
    receptor negative breast cancer. Denominator
    includes
  • Gender women
  • Age at dx 18-69 at time of diagnosis
  • Known or assumed first or only cancer diagnosis
  • Primary breast tumors
  • Epithelial invasive tumors
  • AJCC stage T1cN0M0 or stage II/III
  • ER neg (-) and PR neg (-)
  • All or part of the first course of tx performed
    at reporting facility
  • Known to be alive within 4 months (120 days) of
    diagnosis

17
NQF, ASCO/NCCN and CoC Adopted Indicators
Breast Cancer 3
  • Tamoxifen or 3rd generation aromatase inhibitor
    is considered or administered within 1 year (365
    days) of diagnosis for AJCC T1cN0M0 or Stage
    II/III hormone receptor positive breast cancer.
    Denominator includes
  • Gender women
  • Age at dx gt 18 at time of diagnosis
  • Known or assumed first or only cancer diagnosis
  • Primary breast tumors
  • Epithelial invasive tumors
  • AJCC stage T1cN0M0 or stage II/III
  • ER positive () or PR positive ()
  • All or part of the first course of tx performed
    at reporting facility
  • Known to be alive within 1 year (365 days) of
    diagnosis

18
NQF, ASCO/NCCN and CoC Adopted Indicators Colon
Cancer 1
  • Adjuvant chemotherapy is considered or
    administered within 4 months (120 days) of
    diagnosis for patients under the age of 80 with
    AJCC Stage III (lymph node positive) colon
    cancer. Denominator includes
  • Age 18-79 at time of initial diagnosis
  • Known or presumed to be the first or only cancer
    diagnosis
  • Primary tumors of the colon
  • Epithelial invasive malignancies only
  • AJCC Stage III
  • All or part of the first course of treatment
    performed at reporting facility
  • Known to be alive within 4 months (120 days) of
    diagnosis

19
NQF, ASCO/NCCN and CoC Adopted Indicators Colon
Cancer 2
  • At least 12 regional lymph nodes are removed and
    pathologically examined for resected colon
    cancer. Denominator includes
  • Age gt18 at time of initial diagnosis
  • Known or presumed to be the first or only cancer
    diagnosis
  • Primary tumors of the colon
  • Epithelial invasive malignancies only
  • AJCC Stage I, II or III
  • Surgical resection performed at reporting facility

20
ASCO and CoC Adopted Indicators Rectal Cancer
  • Radiation therapy is considered or administered
    within 6 months (180 days) of diagnosis for
    patients under the age of 80 with clinical or
    pathological AJCC T4N0M0 or Stage III receiving
    surgical resection for rectal cancer.
    Denominator includes
  • Age 18-79 at time of initial diagnosis
  • Known or presumed to be the first or only cancer
    diagnosis
  • Primary tumors of the rectum
  • Epithelial invasive malignancies only
  • AJCC clinical or pathologic Stage T4N0M0 or Stage
    III
  • All or part of the first course of treatment
    performed at reporting facility
  • Known to be alive within 6 months (180 days) of
    diagnosis

21
Data Collection to Support Indicators
  • American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer
    National Cancer DataBase (NCDB)
  • 75 of all newly dx cancer cases in U.S. annually
  • Over 20 million cases reported since 1985 from
    data collected/reported by cancer registries in
    approved facilities
  • Jointly supported by CoC and American Cancer
    Society
  • Several SubReports available
  • Public Benchmark Reports
  • Survival Reports
  • Hospital Comparison Benchmark Reports
  • Cancer Program Practice Profile Reports (CP3R)
    focused on adjuvant chemo admin for Stage III
    cancer of the colon (colon indicator 1)
    comparative data available
  • Electronic Quality Improvement Packets (e-QuIP)
    focused on the 3 breast indicators and colon
    indicator 1 and rectal indicator, however only
    facility-specific data is available

22
How are we doing? (2003-2005 data)
Source eQuIPs and CP3R
Hospital 2 eQuIPs data updated 01/22/08 Hospital
1 updated 01/31/08
23
What happens next?
  • With the NQF endorsement of breast and colon
    cancer indicators, and the Centers for Medicare
    and Medicaid Services (CMS) exploring precursors
    to P4P, the CoC programs are well positioned to
    understand needed areas for improvement and
    should be acting on deficiencies.
  • Additional indicators will be recommended,
    evaluated for top sites/rare cancers
  • Even if your facilities does NOT have a CoC
    approved cancer program

24
Pennsylvania Cancer Control Consortium (PAC3)
  • In 2001 an unprecedented partnership was
    initiated in Pennsylvania by the Pennsylvania
    Department of Health to develop the
    Commonwealths first-ever comprehensive cancer
    control plan in response to the Centers for
    Disease Control and Preventions very ambitious
    challenge to eliminate suffering and death due
    to cancer by the year 2015
  • PAC3 Priority Indicators
  • Chemotherapy is recommended/administered for
    Stage III (regional LN positive) colon cancer
  • At least 12 regional lymph nodes are removed for
    Stage I-III colon cancer
  • Using PA Cancer Registry data obtained from
    facility based registries and pathology labs
  • Preliminary data reported at October 2007 PAC3
    meeting and ongoing evaluation/manuscript in
    progress
  • see next slides

25
PAC3 Why Focus On Colorectal Cancer Treatment?
  • In 2004, colorectal cancer had the 3rd highest
    number of new cases for men and 3rd highest for
    women.
  • However, in 2004 and 2005, colorectal cancer
    mortality was ranked 2nd behind bronchus and lung
    cancer for both men and women.
  • Colorectal cancer is highly treatable and recent
    research and clinical trials have shown that
    there is a correlation between adjuvant
    chemotherapy following surgery and the number of
    lymph nodes tested to cancer recurrence and
    mortality of patients.

26
PAC3 Colon Cancer and Chemotherapy Background
  • Clinical trials conducted in the 1980s
    established that postoperative chemotherapy
    treatment for stage III colon cancer patients
    reduces the risk of recurrence and mortality by
    as much as 30 percent (1,2).
  • The National Institutes of Health (NIH) released
    a consensus statement in 1990, which has led to
    adjuvant chemotherapy being the standard of care
    for stage III colon cancer patients after surgery
    (3).
  • An analysis from the Mayo Clinic (4) showed that
    the benefits of chemotherapy on older patients
    (over age 70) decreases only slightly with
    increased age.
  • The National Cancer Institutes (NCI) webpage for
    Colon Cancer Treatment states that recurrence of
    colorectal cancer after surgery is a major
    problem and is often the ultimate cause of death.

27
NQF measure cut off at age 80
203 / 379
173 / 939
347 / 1,100
116 / 900
31 / 331
28
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29
PAC3 Colon Cancer and Lymph Node Examination
Background
  • The American Joint Committee on Cancer and a NCI
    panel recommended that at least 12 lymph nodes be
    examined in colon cancer patients to confirm the
    absence of nodal involvement by tumor.
  • Recent PCR numbers show that more than 60 of
    patients do not have the recommended 12 nodes
    examined.
  • Screenings for colon cancer are recommended to
    become routine for adults age 50 or older
    however, PCR numbers show that 6 of colon cancer
    cases leading to surgery were in patients under
    the age of 50.
  • Studies have shown that an increased number of
    lymph nodes examined have led to an increased
    survival rate, especially in earlier staged
    cancer.

30
PAC3 Questions
  • How many lymph nodes are really needed, and what
    is the cut-off?
  • Who should decide how many nodes to examine, the
    surgeon or the pathologist?
  • Are patients being staged properly?
  • Does the location of the cancer in the colon have
    an effect?
  • Does age, race, or sex play a role in how many
    nodes should be examined?

31
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32
We can also examine stage comparisons by county,
albeit some counties have very small overall
numbers
33
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37
Data Quality Concerns
  • Chemotherapy Admin for Stage III
  • CS was new effective 2004 AJCC Stage Group
    derived for these cases level of review?
  • Collection of treatment data started in 2000 for
    non-ACOS COC hospitals reporting to the PCR, this
    is the first time they are looking at treatment
    specific benchmark.
  • Documentation of chemotherapy administration for
    many community facilities may be lacking level
    of review / follow back?
  • Documentation of recommendation/administration in
    any hospital-based record is of concern. With
    chemo being administered in outpatient
    environments, UPMC has an optimal environment to
    assist with evaluation.
  • Regional LN Removal
  • It is what it is a reflection of surgical
    removal, pathologic findings and registrar
    documentation
  • Data evaluation process now underway UPMC
    involved with modeling project
  • PCR staff evaluating how PA registrars document
    chemotherapy administration

38
How are we doing? 2006 data
39
Discussion Points
  • Familiarize yourself with the indicators
  • Data Sources
  • Cancer registry public health reporting
  • Pathology synoptics, diagnosis, staging
  • Radiology
  • Pharmacy
  • Labs screening, recurrence
  • Issues with standards and measurable criteria

40
References
  • www.cms.hhs.gov/apps/media/press/release.asp?Count
    er1343
  • http//www.kff.org/insurance/7031/print-sec1.cfm
  • http//outcomes.cancer.gov/survey/test_report
  • http//www.ahrq.gov/qual/nhqr07/Chap2.htmcancer
  • http//www.qualitymeasures.ahrq.gov/
  • http//www.qualityforum.org/
  • www.nccn.org
  • http//www.nccn.org/professionals/physician_gls/f_
    guidelines.asp
  • http//www.guideline.gov/
  • www.facs.org/cancer/qualitymeasures.html
  • www.facs.org/cancer/coc/ncdboverview.html
  • www.pac3.org
  • http//www.ncqa.org/
  • http//www.qipa.org/pa/
  • http//www.paehi.org/
  • http//www.prhi.org/
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