Clinical Practice Guidelines in B.C:

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Clinical Practice Guidelines in B.C: and the Strategy for Cancer Control Recommendations Susan O’Reilly Head, Division of Medical Oncology B.C. Cancer Agency & University of British Columbia. Provincial Systemic Program Leader, B.C. Cancer Agency

Transcript of Clinical Practice Guidelines in B.C:

Page 1: Clinical Practice Guidelines in B.C:

Clinical Practice Guidelines in B.C: and the

Strategy for Cancer Control Recommendations

Susan O’Reilly

Head, Division of Medical Oncology

B.C. Cancer Agency &

University of British Columbia.

Provincial Systemic Program Leader,

B.C. Cancer Agency

Page 2: Clinical Practice Guidelines in B.C:

BCCA Provincial Guidelines Development

Provincial Tumour Groups

• Multidisciplinary groups - site specific e.g. breast, lung, GI– Medical/Radiation/Surgical Oncologists– Pharmacists– Variable participation of other disciplines

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Con’t• 20 year history

• Review new scientific data presented at international meetings

– Abstracts

– Peer reviewed papers

– Local (BC) outcomes/experience

– Propose new guidelines for surgical, radiation and systemic therapy/symptom management

– Promulgate and practice according to guidelines

– Cancer Management Manual

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Priorities and Evaluation Committee, BCCA

• Broad-based representation of various programs/processes statistical expertise,

• Expert panels (curative/chronic/preventative)

• Rank new program/guideline proposals according to scientific merit

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• Scientific review based on 5 levels of evidence

• e.g: level 1 - Scientifically, well-designed, phase III randomized study with sufficient numbers of patients accrued and adequate length of follow-up to determine statistically relevant difference between two or more alternative treatment strategies.

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Con’t• Reasonable assessment of early data when

“Level 1” may not have been achieved yet. e.g. large phase II studies or rare cancer diagnoses

• Assessment of cost/benefit

• New programs - new drugs/combinations

• Emerging role in evaluating merit of existing programs

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Provincial Systemic Therapy Program

Responsible for:

• BCCA Provincial Oncology Budget

• BCCA operating budget for Systemic (medical oncology programs) in BCCA and community centers

• Interactive treatment and educational information on website www.bccancer.bc.ca

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Con’t

• Standards

• Policies

• Guidelines

• Protocols on line (180)

Planning/Approval/

Costing/Implementation

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• Outcomes evaluation (with tumor groups)

• Education “

• Research “

• Strategic and financial planning

• Pharmacoeconomics

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Professional Treatment Guidelines

• American Society of Clinical Oncology

• Canadian Medical Association

• Various national/international professional societies

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Canadian (National) Guidelines• Well-developed adjuvant breast cancer guidelines• Strengths:

– Expert/multidisciplinary/multiprovincial unifying standard

• Weakness:– Protracted consultation process

– Difficulty to be timely when patients/doctors anxious for access

– Provincial Ministries of Health require early budget advice

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Provincial Guidelines

• Cancer Care Ontario– Sophisticated guideline process

– Centrally coordinated and lead (Dr. George Browman)

– Clearly defined process

• Various levels of guideline development in other provinces– Labour intensive

but– Good local “buy in”

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CANADIAN GUIDELINE DEVELOPMENT

An evolving process:

• Canadian Association of Provincial Cancer Agencies (CAPCA)

• Various CAPCA Advisory Committees

• Interprovincial Drug Strategies and Guidelines Working Group (IDSGWG)

• IDSGWG Extranet: Provincial formularies, guidelines

• Canadian Strategy for Cancer Control (Health Canada/CAPCA/CCS/NCIC)

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CANADIAN STRATEGY FOR CANCER CONTROL/CAPCA/CCS/NCIC

Guideline Development Project

• Leader - Dr. G. Browman

• Workshop September 2002, Ottawa

• Broad Scope:– Prevention

– Screening

– Therapy

– Supportive care

– Palliative Care

• Agreement to strike expert working groups

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• National coordinating infrastructure proposed

• Respectful of existing initiatives

• Build capacity/methodologies

• Set priorities

• Conduct inventory

• Facilitate patient/public versions

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Con’t

• Dissemination/implementation/

evaluation/updating/after care

• Research

• Education for primary health care providers

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Do We Need National Consensus?

Therapy Guidelines

Provinces are more similar than different

BUT

Major differences exist in several areas

Page 18: Clinical Practice Guidelines in B.C:

Con’t• Access to:

– First line Gleevec (imatinab) for chronic myeloid leukemia

– CHOP + Rituximab for first line aggressive lymphomas

– Bisphosphonates– Oxaliplatin for colon cancer– Variable funding policies for “take-home”

drugs• Will some problems be solved by Kirby or

Romanow Report?

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• Lack of symptom management/palliative guidelines

• Psychosocial support guidelines not clearly understood or developed (confusion re: “funding” versus “guidelines”)

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• Will Canadian guidelines be timely and feasible?

• Enhance consistency?

• Improve outcomes?

• Improve access?

• Improve cost effectiveness?

• Support implementation?

Page 21: Clinical Practice Guidelines in B.C:

Questions• Are Canadian clinical practice guidelines a

positive or negative influence on standards of care and access to care?

• Will Canadian guidelines be achievable in a timely fashion and be responsive to new evidence?