OneOncology’s 26 treatment pathways are now American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Certified, making them only the fifth program receive this desgination, according to a statement.
Davey Daniel, MD | Image credit: OneOncology
“ASCO’s stamp of approval of our treatment pathway program is a validation of our clinical team’s rigorous work to develop pathways that efficiently put the latest medical evidence into the hands of all of our physician partners and streamline their ordering process,” Davey Daniel, MD, OneOncology’s chief medical officer, said in the statement. “OneOncology’s pathways, which are concordant with many nationally recognized evidence-based guidelines, list various treatment options ensuring they are all-encompassing and include clinical trials when available for a specific cancer setting.”
Edward "Ted" Arrowsmith, MD, MPH | Image credit: OneOncology
OneOncology’s approach to pathway development is led by physicians. Edward “Ted” Arrowsmith, MD, medical director of OneOncology’s Pathways Program, and physician experts from its 5 disease groups (gastrointestinal, genitourinary, breast, lung, and hematology) and other disease subject matter physician experts (gynecology, head, and neck) lead in authoring OneOncology pathways, which are published inside OneOncology’s clinical decision support tool utilized by its partner practices.
The pathways process begins with the Pharmacy and Therapeutics (P&T) Committee of an all-physician body called OneCouncil, which reviews and approves all new indications or new molecular entities, and then authors a drug monograph. Once the monograph has been approved by the P&T Committee, an approved agent is incorporated in draft form into the appropriate pathway and presented to the appropriate OneCouncil Disease Group. The Disease Group members decide if and where it should be added to the pathway, based on efficacy and the adverse event profile of the new agent compared with other treatment options.
Lisa Raff, PharmD, BCPS, BCOP| Image credit: OneOncology
Pathways are reviewed and updated regularly by OneOncology experts when data is presented at nationally recognized meetings or in peer-reviewed journals. Each pathway is broken out by appropriate stage and treatment options by stage, including neoadjuvant, adjuvant, recurrent, locally advanced, and metastatic treatment settings, and have potential treatment options clearly listed.
“Our treatment pathways increase appropriate first-line treatment, based on genomic testing and biomarkers, while reducing adverse events experienced by patients due to standardized regimens and appropriate supportive care,” said Lisa Raff, PharmD, BCPS, BCOP | Image credit: OneOncology. “Being recognized by ASCO Certified demonstrates to our physician partners the OneOncology Treatment Pathways meet ASCO Criteria for High Quality Clinical Pathways in Oncology.”
MINT Trial 26-Week Data Show Inebilizumab for gMG Is Effective and Safe
April 1st 2025These are data to week 26 on the monoclonal antibody and antineoplastic agent; data out to week 52 of the MINT trial will be presented in a late-breaking oral session at the upcoming American Academy of Neurology Annual Meeting.
Read More
Politics vs Science: The Future of US Public Health
February 4th 2025On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we speak with Perry N. Halkitis, PhD, MS, MPH, dean of the Rutgers School of Public Health, on the public health implications of the US withdrawal from the World Health Organization and the role of public health leaders in advocating for science and health.
Listen
Bridging Care Gaps With a Systemwide Value-Based Care Strategy
March 29th 2025Mapping care management needs by defining patient populations and then stratifying them according to risk and their needs can help to spur the transformation of a siloed health care system into an integrated system that is able to better provide holistic, value-based care despite the many transitions that continue among hospital, primary, specialty, and community care environments.
Read More
Understanding Primary and Secondary Nonadherence to Chronic Oral Medication
March 28th 2025Medication nonadherence to oral anticoagulants and oral anti–prostate cancer medication has been scrutinized through new research conducted among patients and health care providers and presented by the American Medical Group Association at its 2025 annual meeting, held March 26-29 in Grapevine, Texas.
Read More