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Tips for Early Patient Identification for CAR T-Cell Therapy and Care Continuity with Community Providers

In the community setting, accurate patient identification for CAR T-cell therapy is critical for appropriate and timely treatment. Often, patients with advanced hematologic cancers are considered for, or become aware of, CAR T-cell therapy after the optimal treatment window has closed.1 Additionally, there are significant financial, logistical, and educational barriers that patients and their caregivers may face in accessing this potentially life-saving immunotherapy.2 However, less is known about how patients are educated on CAR T-cell therapy and how well they are able to maintain relationships with their referring providers. Additionally, there remains an opportunity to improve community oncology education surrounding timely patient identification and ways to harmonize collaboration between referring community programs and accredited treatment centers.

ACCC—with its program partners Cancer Support Community, the Association of American Cancer Institutes and the Advanced Practitioner Society for Hematology and Oncology, and with support by Kite Pharma—aims to better understand patient and caregiver education and experience with CAR T-cell therapy and identify ways in which cancer programs can improve timely identification and referral as well as improve communication and care coordination between referring and treating providers. ACCC will also share tips and highlight resources that can be utilized to educate patients and their caregivers on the option of CAR T-cell therapy early in the treatment journey, to enable more patients to potentially qualify for therapy.

For more information on this program, please contact the ACCC Provider Education department.

Cancer Buzz Podcasts

Community CAR T-Cell Patient Identification Framework — [MINI PODCAST] EP 138

December 18, 2023

As the use of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy continues to expand as an effective treatment for hematologic malignancies, understanding how to identify eligible patients early and implementation of an effective framework for identification can improve care coordination and better prepare community cancer programs for widespread use of CAR T-cell therapy.
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Focus Group Highlights

Tips for Early Patient Identification and Care Continuity for CAR T-Cell Therapy

CAR-T-Focus-Group-Highlights-275x356In 2023, ACCC conducted virtual focus groups to better understand patient and caregiver education and experience with CAR T-cell therapy and identify ways in which cancer programs can improve timely identification and referral as well as understand current practices for communication and care coordination between referring and treating providers.
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From Oncology Issues

If They Recur, You Should Refer

A-Community-Oncologist-Patient-ID-Roundtable-Summary-275x356This Community Oncologist Patient ID Roundtable brought together 3 professional societies: the Association of American Cancer Institutes, the Association of Community Cancer Centers, and the American Society for Transplan¬tation and Cellular Therapy with the aim of developing a standardized framework to enable community oncologists to easily assess patients for CAR T-cell therapy, with a focus on large B cell lymphoma.
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References

  1. Kansagra A, Farnia S, Majhail N. Expanding Access to Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cell Therapies: Challenges and Opportunities. Am Soc Clin Oncol Educ Book. 2020;40:1-8. doi:10.1200/EDBK_279151
  2. Mikhael J, Fowler J, Shah N. Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cell Therapies: Barriers and Solutions to Access. JCO Oncol Pract. 2022;18(12):800-807. doi:10.1200/OP.22.00315

Our Partners

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In partnership with the Association of American Cancer Institutes (AACI), the Advanced Practitioner Society of Hematology and Oncology (APSHO), and Cancer Support Community.

Our Supporter

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This program is made possible by support from Kite Pharma.