health centers have traditionally led the diffusion of new technologies into community practice, commercial availability and marketing of genetic testing have accelerated the uptake of testing in the community setting, where clinicians are often
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Deborah J. MacDonald, Kathleen R. Blazer, and Jeffrey N. Weitzel
Ahmed A. Hussein, Umar Iqbal, Zhe Jing, Yousuf Ramahi, Holly Houenstein, Stephanie Newman, Blake Peterson, Katarina Krajacic, Adeena Samoni, Bo Xu, Norbert Sule, Gissou Azabdaftari, Eric C. Kauffman, James L. Mohler, Michael Kuettel, and Khurshid A. Guru
at LPCC and communicated to outside pathologists. Patients who were presented at LPCC but received treatment outside our hospital were contacted to determine the final treatment received. Concordance between recommendations made by community
Michael A. Kolodziej
tangible way to improve the care of patients. As a community oncologist, it has been my pleasure to be on the frontlines, as a witness to and participant in this reformation. However, we do have our challenges. Community oncologists are being assaulted on
John H. Ward
from panels composed of oncology professionals from NCCN member institutions. Over time, these guidelines have become more and more accepted by the oncology community in the United States. They are also extensively used internationally. As reported by
Presented by: Bláz Bush, Paula Chambers Raney, Shail Maingi, Mandi L. Pratt-Chapman, and Scout
Moderated by: Clifford Goodman
Who Comprises the LGBTQ+ Community? LGBTQ+ is an abbreviation for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and more, which encompasses genderqueer, nonbinary, questioning, queer, intersex, and asexual, among others. According to Bláz Bush
Allison Lipitz-Snyderman, Jessica Kennington, Brooke Hogan, Deborah Korenstein, Leonard Kalman, Suresh Nair, Peter Yu, Paul Sabbatini, and David Pfister
evident than in oncology, where community health systems have begun to partner with academic medical centers, which are attempting to extend their reach into the community setting, where 85% of cancer care is delivered. 6 , 7 Several NCI
Supriya G. Mohile, Allison Magnuson, Chintan Pandya, Carla Velarde, Paul Duberstein, Arti Hurria, Kah Poh Loh, Megan Wells, Sandy Plumb, Nikesha Gilmore, Marie Flannery, Marsha Wittink, Ronald Epstein, Charles E. Heckler, Michelle Janelsins, Karen Mustian, Judith O. Hopkins, Jane Liu, Srihari Peri, and William Dale
their primary care providers (PCPs), 12 community oncology practices should be equipped to recognize common age-related concerns. Despite the rapidly increasing population of older patients with cancer, most oncologists have received little geriatrics
Daniel P. Mirda
Tempero: How in the world can a community oncologist keep up to date with new treatment options for patients with cancer? Mirda: There are many challenges to treating patients with the latest and best therapies tailored to their particular
Christie Hancock and Jacob Bitran
at our community hospital. Methods: Patients in our oncology clinic that underwent NGS testing of their tumor were reviewed. Specifically, the patient’s age, gender, diagnosis, date of diagnosis, previous lines of treatment, date of NGS testing, and
Efrat Dotan, Elizabeth Handorf, Caitlin R. Meeker, Bianca Lewis, Kelly Filchner, Jennifer S. Winn, and Lori J. Goldstein
Introduction: Geriatric assessment (GA) is recommended for evaluating an older cancer patient’s fitness for treatment; however, it is underutilized in the community. We sought to define the gaps that exist in community oncology practices in the