| Literature DB >> 34080317 |
Mathushan Subasri1,2, David Barrett1, Jovana Sibalija1,3, Lisa Bitacola4, Richard B Kim1,2.
Abstract
Pharmacogenomics (PGx)-based personalized medicine (PM) is increasingly utilized to guide treatment decisions for many drug-disease combinations. Notably, London Health Sciences Centre (LHSC) has pioneered a PGx program that has become a staple for London-based specialists. Although implementational studies have been conducted in other jurisdictions, the Canadian healthcare system is understudied. Herein, the multistakeholder perspectives on implementational drivers and barriers are elucidated. Using a mixed-method qualitative model, key stakeholders, and patients from LHSC's PGx-based PM clinic were interviewed and surveyed, respectively. Interview transcripts were thematically analyzed in a stepwise process of customer profiling, value mapping, and business model canvasing. Value for LHSC located specialist users of PGx was driven by the quick turnaround time, independence of the PGx clinic, and the quality of information. Engagement of external specialists was only limited by access and awareness, whereas other healthcare nonusers were limited by education and applicability. The major determinant of successful adoption at novel sites were institutional champions. Patients valued and approved of the service, expressed a general willingness to pay, but often traveled far to receive genotyping. This paper discusses the critical pillars of education, awareness, advocacy, and efficiency required to address implementation barriers to healthcare service innovation in Canada. Further adoption of PGx practices into Canadian hospitals is an important factor for advancing system-level changes in care delivery, patient experiences, and outcomes. The findings in this paper can help inform efforts to advance clinical PGx practices, but also the potential adoption and implementation of other innovative healthcare service solutions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34080317 PMCID: PMC8604218 DOI: 10.1111/cts.13083
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 1752-8054 Impact factor: 4.689
Canadian stakeholder perspectives on pharmacogenomics
| Stakeholder group | Jurisdiction | Year | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clinicians | Quebec | 2018 | Amara et al. |
| Ontario | 2015 | Walden et al. | |
| Ontario | 2019 | Chan et al. | |
| Alberta | 2021 | Asgarpour et al. | |
| Patients | Ontario | 2019 | Waldman et al. |
| Ontario | 2013 | Loo et al. | |
| Ontario | 2014 | Cuffe et al. | |
| Public | Eastern Canada | 2020 | Etchegary et al. |
| Ontario | 2020 | Bereza et al. | |
| Students | Ontario | 2014 | Lanktree et al. |
| Pharmacists | Quebec | 2013 | de Denus et al. |
| Quebec | 2020 | Petis et al. | |
| Quebec | 2020 | Meloche et al. | |
| British Columbia | 2020 | Breaux et al. |
Characteristics of stakeholder interview participants
| Stakeholder group | Subgroup | Local (LHSC) | External |
|---|---|---|---|
| Referring Specialists | Oncologists | 4 | 4 |
| Gastroenterologists | 4 | 2 | |
| Nonreferring Healthcare Professionals | General Practitioners | 5 | |
| Nurses | 1 | ||
| Geriatricians | 3 | ||
| Pediatricians | 3 | ||
| Psychiatrists | 2 | ||
| Pharmacists | 1 | ||
| Cardiologists | 1 | ||
| Respirologists | 1 | ||
| Endocrinologists | 1 | ||
| Research | Pharmacology | 5 | 1 |
| Admin/management |
Southwest‐LHIN LHSC |
1 2 |
Abbreviations: LHIN, Local Health Integration Network; LHSC, London Health Sciences Centre.
FIGURE 1Integration of customer profiles, value maps and the business canvas model. Customer profiles (bottom right) defines the pains and gains associated with each stakeholders’ respective jobs. This information is leveraged to create the value map (bottom left), which defines the products and services (i.e., key partners, activities, and resources) that will drive the creation of gains and relief of pains (i.e., value). The delivery of gain creators and pain relivers is derived from the fit between the customer profile and value map, in other words the relationship and channels to the business offering. Together, these integrate into the business canvas model (top), which defines the value proposition and outlines the necessary components for value creation
FIGURE 2Business canvas model for LHSC’s major referring specialists to the PGx clinic. Starting with interview transcripts, the customer profiles (customer jobs, gain, and pains) and value maps (products/services, gain creators, and pain relivers) were developed. From here, the nine quadrants of the business canvas model were completed. The value of the PGx clinic for major specialists was driven by the independence of the clinic, the rapid turnaround time, and how concise yet comprehensive the information provided was. ADR, adverse drug reaction; GI, gastrointestinal; LHSC, London Health Sciences Centre; LOS, length of stay; PM, personalized medicine
FIGURE 3Additional patient responses to survey questions. Questions were scaled on a 5‐point Likert scale. Some patients did not answer every question (n = 15–18). All patients had a positive experience, and one patient felt neutral about their level of confusion after receiving their test results
Survey results from patients genotyped at LHSC PGx clinic
| Test | Age range | Sex | Travel time | Clinic expectations | Amount willing to pay | Summarized comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DPYD | 35–44 | F | >2 h | Greatly exceeded | >$200 | Kind, friendly, informative team, efficient. Thorough understanding of benefits. |
| 35–44 | M | 30–45 min | Greatly exceeded | Prefer not to say | Switched from blood to saliva sample; explained the legalities – I was overjoyed! | |
| 45–54 | N/A | 1.5–2 h | Greatly exceeded | $100–$200 | On time, minimal waiting, very professional doctor and staff, explained things really well. | |
| 55–64 | M | 45 min–1 h | Greatly exceeded | $100–$200 | Got in quickly. Things were explained well by doctor and nurse, who were truly kind. | |
| 55–64 | F | >2 h | Greatly exceeded | $100–$200 | Very quick from referral to appointment, answered every question I had. | |
| 55–64 | M | >2 h | Exceeded | >$200 | Very knowledgeable, answered all questions. Could testing be done at same time as blood draw? | |
| 65–74 | M | >2 h | Exceeded | $100–$200 | I was treated so well, appointment was so fast. | |
| 65–74 | F | 1.5–2 h | Exceeded | >$200 | Staff was very pleasant and helpful. Explained the nature of his study. | |
| 65–74 | M | 30–45 min | Greatly exceeded | <$100 | Appointment on time with no waiting, very knowledgeable staff. | |
| 65–74 | F | <30 min | Exceeded | $100–$200 | So well explained. Quick appointment and painless. | |
| 65–74 | M | 1–1.5 h | Greatly exceeded | Prefer not to say | Spent time to explain and felt better once I understood the concept and how it helps me. | |
| 65–74 | M | <30 min | N/A | Prefer not to say | Very quick appointment and explained everything well. | |
| 65–74 | F | 1.5–2 h | Matched | Prefer not to say | Very informative, pleasant and positive. | |
| 75–84 | F | <30 min | N/A | <$100 | Very informative and easy to understand. | |
| TMPT | 18–24 | F | <30 min | Matched | <$100 | Explained research and process being done, passionate, caring, informative team. |
| 55–64 | F | 45 min–1 h | Greatly exceeded | N/A | Kind, explained the research, explained the procedure. | |
| 55–64 | N/A | 30–45 min | Exceeded | <$100 | Fast appointment, on time, efficient staff. Impressed to find out drug and dosage can be optimized. | |
| 55–64 | M | 1–1.5 h | Greatly exceeded | $100–$200 | Staff were wonderful at explaining the testing and answered questions in full. |
Abbreviations: DPYD, Dihydropyrimidine Dehydrogenase; LHSC, London Health Sciences Centre; N/A, not available; PGx, pharmacogenomics.