The Washington State Community Cancer Care Report: A multi-stakeholder effort to characterize quality of care and costs for Washington State oncology practices.
Ramsey, SD; Kreizenbeck, KL; Panattoni, LE; Fedorenko, CR; Li, L; Sun, Q; Barger, S; Lyman, GH
Published in: Journal of Clinical Oncology
31 Background: Although many quality measures exist in oncology, there have been few efforts to prioritize, measure, and report quality and costs for an entire region. Here, we report the results of a multi-year, multi-stakeholder effort aimed at public reporting of nationally recognized quality metrics for oncology practices in Washington State. Methods: Quality metrics were selected from nationally-recognized measures through a structured process involving oncology providers, health insurance leaders, patient advocates, and policy experts. Cancer registry records from 2014 to 2016 were linked with claims data from two commercial insurers and Medicare, representing approximately 70% of cancer patients in the state. Patients were assigned to oncology clinics using claims data; 27 clinics were large enough for inclusion in at least one measure in the report. Thirteen metrics were combined to produce one clinic-level quality score per measure. Each quality score was mapped to total episode cost per patient. Results were adjusted to account for clinic size, cancer characteristics (e.g. stage), demographics, and comorbidity where appropriate. Results: Conclusions: The Community Cancer Care in Washington State: Quality and Cost Report 2018 is the first publicly accessible report showing clinic-level quality measures linked to cost in oncology. Its ultimate goal is to improve care and lower costs by spurring collaboration, research and innovation.[Table: see text]