HCP Roundtable: Breaking Barriers and Cultivating Clinical Excellence in Endometrial Cancer Care

HCP Roundtable: Breaking Barriers and Cultivating Clinical Excellence in Endometrial Cancer Care from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

What are obstacles faced by healthcare providers (HCPs) treating endometrial cancer patients and families? How can HCPs foster a culture of innovation and continuous improvement in clinical practice? Dr. Radhika Gogoi of Karmanos Cancer Institute and Dr. Charlotte Gamble of MedStar Health unravel the complexities of endometrial cancer care, providing HCPs with the insights and tools needed to navigate challenges effectively and to deliver optimal care to their patients and families.

See More from EPEP Endometrial Cancer

Related Resources:

Dr. Charlotte Gamble: Why Is It Important for You to Empower Patients

Dr. Charlotte Gamble: Why Is It Important for You to Empower Patients?

Addressing Disparities in Gynecologic Oncology | Key Challenges and Solutions

Addressing Disparities in Gynecologic Oncology | Key Challenges and Solutions

Overcoming Barriers: Empowering Underrepresented Groups With Endometrial Cancer

Overcoming Barriers: Empowering Underrepresented Groups With Endometrial Cancer

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Welcome to this Empowering Providers to Empower Patients or EPEP Program. I’m Dr. Nicole Rochester, founder and CEO of Your GPS Doc. EPEP is a Patient Empowerment Network program that serves as a secure space for healthcare providers to learn techniques for improving physician patient communication and to overcome practice barriers. In this endometrial cancer healthcare provider roundtable, we are discussing breaking barriers and cultivating clinical excellence in endometrial cancer care. 

This program aims to improve healthcare provider awareness of screening and access disparities to specialized care in endometrial cancer, while also addressing solutions to overcome practice barriers such as lack of awareness, outdated practices, and inertia. Today, we’ll talk about some of the complexities of endometrial cancer care and we’ll provide healthcare providers with the insights and tools needed to navigate challenges effectively.

Our discussion will cover enhancing healthcare provider awareness of diagnostic and access disparities to specialized care in endometrial cancer, actionable strategies to overcome practice barriers in endometrial cancer care and empowering providers through fostering a culture of innovation and continuous improvement in clinical practice. 

It is my privilege to be joined by Dr. Radhika Gogoi from Karmanos Cancer Institute. Dr. Gogoi is a dedicated clinician and cancer researcher focused on exploring the Hippo pathway in gynecologic cancers, aiming to uncover novel therapeutic approaches. Thank you so much for joining us today, Dr. Gogoi.

Dr. Radhika Gogoi:

Thank you, Dr. Rochester, and thank you for having me. It’s great to be here.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

It’s also my honor to be joined by Dr. Charlotte Gamble, gynecologic oncologist at MedStar Washington Hospital Center and MedStar Southern Maryland Hospital. Dr. Gamble is dedicated to taking care of patients who have historically been marginalized and are vulnerable to poor health outcomes. Her research examines the role of safety net hospital systems in gynecologic cancer care. Thank you so much for joining us today, Dr. Gamble.

Dr. Charlotte Gamble:

Thank you so much for having me. It’s a pleasure to be here.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

So we’re going to start today’s discussion by diving into enhancing healthcare provider awareness of diagnostic and access disparities in endometrial cancer care. And I want to start by just framing the current situation. Black women are twice as likely to die from endometrial cancer when compared to their white women counterparts.

There is no current screening test for endometrial cancer, and diagnosis is usually made after patients present with symptoms. Sadly, the list doesn’t end there. So I’m going to start with you, Dr. Gogoi. What are the primary barriers to accessing specialized care for endometrial cancer that you’ve observed in your practice and perhaps in others?

Dr. Radhika Gogoi:

So thank you for that question. I guess I just want to start by just level setting a little bit and talking about specifically endometrial cancer disparities. So unlike other gynecologic cancers, which actually have been shown to be decreasing in incidence, endometrial cancer is actually one of the cancers that is increasing. We know that low grade endometrial cancers really have an excellent prognosis, but higher grade endometrial cancers really have a much poorer prognosis.

And that’s the specific subgroup that seems to be increasing in all women. Black women, again, as you mentioned, have the lowest survival rate, and that is even when corrected for the specific type of endometrial cancer and the stage of endometrial cancer. So with that sort of background and problem, the question really becomes how do we allow and educate our patients about the barriers that they face when accessing specialized care?

And so some of the barriers, at least that I’ve noticed, and certainly in the hospital that I practice in is really as you pointed out, that there is no good current screening test. Black women tend to have a delayed onset from the time of their symptoms, which in this case is really postmenopausal bleeding to actually obtaining a diagnosis.

And there are studies that have shown that some of that is education or there is an understanding that perhaps postmenopausal bleeding is not as significant an issue, doesn’t lead necessarily, to obtaining healthcare which as you can appreciate then delays the onset of the diagnosis. There is also that Black women present with more advanced disease. This is, again, likely due to the delay in diagnosis and the delay from diagnosis to getting treated.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you. Thank you, Dr. Gogoi for level setting and for getting us started with a better understanding of those disparities. And I’d love to go to you, Dr. Gamble. In your experience, what are the primary barriers to addressing specialized care for endometrial cancer?

Dr. Charlotte Gamble:

Yeah, thank you so much.  I’ll just add some additional context. I think there are so many places in which these barriers can happen. So as Dr. Gogoi alluded to, sometimes that can happen at the patient level due to just not recognizing that having irregular, unpredictable bleeding, bleeding after menopause, bleeding even before menopause has happened, but really heavy bleeding or heavy periods that any sort of abnormal, heavy irregular bleeding is not normal and has to be evaluated in a timely fashion. But that’s at the patient level.

And sometimes, people have competing priorities where they might recognize that it’s a problem but not be able to make it to their doctor’s office. Have other kinds of things that are happening in their day-to-day lives where they just are not able to prioritize their own health. We also see then how the system can affect that.

If someone hasn’t had a gynecologist in years, or their gynecologist said, bye, you don’t need to see me anymore because you’re over the age of 65, you no longer need pap smears and they’ve fallen out of care, or patients who don’t have health insurance or patients who live really far away from their doctors. Accessing the healthcare system in the year of our Lord 2024 is actually really, really hard. If you lack the resources or lack the wherewithal to navigate that.

Additionally, what we see on the healthcare standpoint is that maybe patients do actually access the healthcare system. They call the gynecologist’s office. They call their primary care doctor, and they’re told by an admin staff or someone else that hears them, but that says, okay, fine, we’ll get you in, but it’s going to be in about three-and-a-half months.

And so sometimes those barriers and those delays come from the health system in general, which is also a challenge. And then even after they present to their doctor, sometimes they’re told, “Okay, let’s go ahead and let’s get an ultrasound first, and based on what your ultrasound looks like, then we’ll decide if we need to do a uterine biopsy to diagnose you.” But we also know that for certain types of these uterine cancers, specifically the really aggressive ones, that sometimes their ultrasound might look totally fine, but there still can be cancer underlying there.

And so I think that there are multiple barriers to getting even. That’s before the diagnosis even happens much less what comes after the diagnosis is had, how one gets from their gynecologist to a surgical subspecialist called the gynecological oncologist that Dr. Gogoi and I, this is our field. And there are multiple barriers and referral pathways there. But that’s to give a little bit more context that these things might start at the patient level, but the healthcare system, unfortunately, can contribute in rarely challenging ways to the barriers that patients face.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you both for that. I think we have a really good idea of the breadth of this issue, and I appreciate both of you pointing out that there are patient level factors, but there are also system level factors that come into play. And, Dr. Gamble, you just kind of ended by talking about referrals.

So I’m going to pick up there. And let’s talk about referral patterns. And I’ll start with you for this question. How do those referral patterns impact access to specialized care gynecologic oncologists like yourself and Dr. Gogoi for women who are diagnosed with endometrial cancer and specifically for those underserved populations?

Dr. Charlotte Gamble:

Yeah, this is a complicated question and multi-layered. Again, I think big picture referral patterns. We know that there are barriers for patients who live rurally. We know there are barriers for patients who don’t have insurance or their insurance might be, they might be underinsured. And so there’s kind of system level barriers that we see on the macro level in some of our referral pathways.

And occasionally, sometimes patients with gynecologic cancers will actually be referred to not gynecologic oncologists, which are surgical subspecialists that work specifically with gynecologic malignancies, but might be referred to a general surgeon first, or a general gynecologist who may or may not know kind of what they’re getting into in terms of the care. I think what I’ve noticed in real life is that when I’m getting referrals, sometimes I’m getting a text message, sometimes I’m getting an email, sometimes getting a message in the medical record system, and the referrals are coming in many different ways.

Occasionally, patients are calling themselves. And so the ways that referrals actually then happen in real life and how those spread to kind of the macro levels is really interesting to me. It can be very complicated, very complex, and I think this is where the role of having healthcare navigators comes into play where folks can really assist patients in getting to the right surgical subspecialists.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Absolutely. And we know there’s a lot of evidence for the role of healthcare navigators in other disease spaces and specifically in cancer. So I appreciate you mentioning that. We’ve talked a little bit about patient level factors, and we’ve talked about system level factors. We haven’t talked a lot about maybe some provider level factors.

And I want to talk about cultural competency and the role that that plays in addressing disparities in endometrial cancer, specifically with regard to diagnosis. And I’m going to start with you, Dr. Gogoi on this one. And if you can share the role that you believe cultural competency plays in addressing some of these disparities that we’ve been talking about.

Dr. Radhika Gogoi:

Yeah, so I think you heard from us a little bit that oftentimes some of the symptoms that our patients have had are either ignored, or patients haven’t had a chance to fully address them, or the providers haven’t fully evaluated kind of the importance of their symptoms. And I think, so again, I think nurse navigators community educators are essential in sort of educating our communities about the importance of seeking care when you have sort of the symptoms that Dr. Gamble talked about and in a really timely fashion. I think that that’s really important as well.

So I think it obviously, cultural competency is important in sort of all facets of a patient’s journey as they kind of have the diagnosis through their treatment. But I think that the other place is really once they enter the healthcare system being aware and mindful of sort of healthcare mistrust both from the provider, from the institution, from a much larger governmental level and being aware of that distrust and really trying to take time to address their concerns.

That specifically at least comes up a lot in terms of clinical trials where we know that minority populations, Black patients are met vastly underrepresented. And so I think specifically in that area, there is really the opportunity to do a much better job in providing transparency about the trial design, about recruiting specifically minority patients. Interestingly, a lot of these landmark trials actually didn’t include race as a measure. And so we know that they’re underrepresented, but we actually don’t know how much minority populations are underrepresented. So important to really understand where patients are coming from when they enter a healthcare institution.

Dr. Nicole Rochester: 

Absolutely. Thank you. Thank you so much for that. Dr. Gamble, can you speak to awareness? You spoke about the fact that sometimes patients are referred to perhaps the wrong provider. You know, there was that sent, you mentioned to a general surgeon instead of to a gynecologic oncologist. And so we can imagine that there may be some challenges both in the primary care setting and perhaps even among general obstetrician gynecologists. So can you speak to how we can elevate the level of awareness to enhance healthcare provider awareness of diagnosis and access disparities and really appropriate referral patterns?

Dr. Charlotte Gamble:

Yeah, absolutely. I think it’s a tough question. I think it’s, again, like all things, it’s a little bit nuanced. Sometimes, again different levels of providers, different parts of the country, everybody practices a little bit differently. So everyone knows once you get a cancer diagnosis, you should probably go to a cancer specialist. And so generally, that’s coming to a gynecologic oncologist generally, or that’s sometimes that’s going to a medical oncologist. But occasionally, sometimes patients will have symptoms where it’s just abnormal bleeding, and they’re seeing a general gynecologist who then does a hysterectomy, and there’s a surprise diagnosis of an endometrial cancer.

Usually they’re, hopefully, they’re not making it too much to kind of the general surgery pathway our general surgery colleagues are awesome, but it’s kind of a different kettle of fish and the type of hysterectomy that’s needed and the type of specific surgery that’s needed to include lymph node assessment is different for somebody who’s getting a cancer surgery for uterine cancer compared to, let’s say, for fibroids or for adenomyosis or a non-gynecologic cancer situation.

I think, again, I’m on the receiving end of all of this, so I see patients who have made it to my doorstep and gotten kind of through the hoops and the barriers, but there’s definitely those out there that we know from the data somehow ended up with their surgery, not exactly in the appropriate hands.

And it’s hard to say, I don’t know if I actually even have advice for like how this is supposed to happen. I think we need to understand kind of the as Dr. Gogoi alluded to earlier, just kind of how prevalent endometrial cancer is right now and how the rates are rising and that abnormal bleeding has to be taken very seriously. And the thing that I harp on the most is a normal ultrasound does not mean there’s nothing else to explore there. There has to be a tissue biopsy.

And really impressing that on both patients as well as the first kind of people that they see, either their primary care doctor or even a nurse practitioner, a physician assistant. Just because there’s a normal ultrasound does not mean that your work is done. And we have studies to really demonstrate how that can delay patient’s care and missed diagnoses can happen. So it’s hard to answer your question, to like, how do we fix the referral pathway system? I don’t know the answer to that, and maybe Dr. Gogoi can speak to that, but I will say from like a screening standpoint, since there’s no great screening test, an ultrasound is not, might be the first step, but it’s definitely not the only step and it cannot be the last.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

I appreciate that. As you were talking, I was thinking like this needs to be a major awareness campaign, not just for healthcare providers, but for patients as well. You know, this idea that abnormal or or postmenopausal bleeding is never normal and make sure your doctor gets a tissue biopsy and not just an ultrasound. Dr. Gogoi, we’ve talked already about some of the obstacles and barriers faced by patients. Can you talk about some of the obstacles or barriers that are faced by healthcare providers when treating endometrial cancer?

Dr. Radhika Gogoi:

Yeah, I think that the one other barrier that sort of comes up a lot specifically in terms of maybe even in terms of getting a patient to their referring providers or a G1 oncologist is transportation. I find that transportation is a huge issue for our patients. And it’s mostly associated with cost. So I think that one of the things that really, that we can do as a community is to somehow provide means or ways for our patients to get to us once they’re diagnosed. It’s hard enough to get them to us but when they’re facing challenges of cost and transportation, that becomes even more challenging.

So I think that that’s from a patient standpoint. And then, and then I think what Dr. Gamble mentioned about really the barriers for providers is really education around ultrasound and how those how specifically perhaps even in Black women, that it’s not as predictive of endometrial cancer risk and that an ultrasound alone is not enough of a workup for a number of these patients to rule out some underlying pathology. So that’s huge, and again mistrust of the medical profession is something that all healthcare providers deal with. And allowing time for patients to ask their questions, to be transparent about what it is that you’re doing and why I think goes a long way towards overcoming those challenges.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you both for that. I think we’ve gotten a lot of information around the causes of the disparities and some actions that we can begin taking. Are there any unforeseen or outdated practice-related barriers that may hinder your work and that of your colleagues? And on that same note, are there any solutions or actions related to those? And I’ll start with you on this one, Dr. Gamble.

Dr. Charlotte Gamble:

Well, starting all the way back, I think an outdated practice is not listening to patients, and not recognizing your own privilege as a provider. I think that to Dr. Gogoi’s point that she’s mentioned a couple of times now, I have innumerable patients that just felt that they were not listened to felt that they couldn’t…that their stories were not being heard, that they faced no’s, no’s, no’s at multiple levels in trying to seek care for abnormal bleeding, and come to me very frustrated and kind of weary. And I think just really understanding how vulnerable patients are when they’re seeking care, and being cognizant of the privilege that we have as healthcare providers is something that is more contemporary compared to an outdated practice of being very paternalistic.

I guess sometimes I have had patients who are like, yeah, I was told that I needed a biopsy and I just…the way that they told me and the way that they said that it had to be done tomorrow, it freaked me out, and I couldn’t do it. And it’s just kind of unfortunate when the recommendations might be correct, but the way in which it’s being delivered is not being received by the patients in a way that they’re able to be receptive to.

I think another outdated practice again that I harp on that I’m such a strong believer in is like just the role of the ultrasound. I really, I don’t like it. I hate it. I think it’s useful for knowing uterine size and maybe if there’s some kind of stuff inside the uterus, but abnormal bleeding either before menopause or after menopause has to have a tissued biopsy. So I think that’s outdated to just get an ultrasound and have the patient come back, because it continues to perpetuate delays in care, and I think disparities to an extent. Another outdated…no, I don’t know. Is there anything else, Dr. Gogoi, that you’d add to this?

Dr. Radhika Gogoi:

I feel like this is a lot lot older now. It used to be at one point that we used to do all our endometrial cancer patients with open surgery. I think that now, I guess it’s even more outdated than outdated. Most of the surgeries are now pretty much done either minimally, invasively laparoscopically or robotically. There are obviously extenuating circumstances to both of those things, but I think approach to surgery is also sort of evolved.

The treatment paradigm for patients with advanced endometrial cancers has evolved even more so in the last maybe two years or so with the role of immunotherapy. So encouraging our patients to be educated about their options, both for route of surgery, for treatment and to make sure to ask those questions at the time of their office visit I think is something that we should all encourage.

Dr. Charlotte Gamble:

I would dovetail from that and also say, to kind of harken back to some of the other things we discussed in terms of referral pathways and things like that, and just how gynecologic oncology care is delivered in different parts of the country, there are various models for this, and so classically, patients who have gynecologic cancers, including endometrial cancer are managed solely by the gynecologic oncologist, meaning a surgical subspecialist like myself or Dr. Gogoi, who not only do the surgery, but also deliver if patients need it chemotherapy or specialized systemic therapies afterwards, sometimes with a component in partnership with a radiation oncologist.

But there are parts of the country by institution or by geography where the care that comes after the initial surgery done by the gynecologic oncologist might be shared with a medical oncologist who may or may not actually have super sub-specialized training when it comes to gynecologic cancers, because again, historically, this has been an area that’s been managed really by our subspecialty.

And so I encourage patients as well as referring doctors, et cetera, et cetera, to make sure that whoever, if there’s additional therapies that are needed after the hysterectomy is done, such as chemotherapy or immunotherapy, as Dr. Gogoi alluded to, that that is done in partnership with a gynecologic oncologist, because our field is kind of driving where so much of the contemporary understanding of how to manage these conditions long-term is coming from. And to make sure that if a medical oncologist is doing this, they feel very competent. They do this all the time, and they’re working in close partnership with their gynecologic oncology colleagues.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Wonderful. Thank you for that. So as we talk about outdated practices, I guess the other side of the coin is innovation and continuous improvement. And so I’ll turn this question to you, Dr. Gogoi. How can healthcare providers and hospital leaders foster a culture of innovation and continuous improvement? So that’s some of these outdated practices that you all, that you and Dr. Gamble, discussed are really no longer a thing?

Dr. Radhika Gogoi:

Yeah. So I couldn’t agree more.I think that some of those innovative approaches really come from enrolling in clinical trials. And so I think that the importance of having minority populations, equally represented in clinical trials is essential. Otherwise we’re not going to make the progress that we need to make to really equal the playing field here, so to speak. So I think that that really is a huge player trying to educate patients about clinical trial options, being transparent about what those look like, who benefits, what the data suggests, why it’s important to me is again, really key.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Wonderful. And Dr. Gamble, if we were to be specific, are there any healthcare provider to healthcare provider strategies, anything that you’ve seen work, maybe things that you’ve done yourself, innovative approaches or protocols with regard to this idea of innovation and continuous improvement?

Dr. Charlotte Gamble:

Yeah, I think different institutions have different cultures, and I think having institutional culture that embraces change that is, desires to be on the vanguard of advancing science, and the science could be in terms of bench research. It could be in terms of clinical trials, it could be in terms of healthcare delivery, really trying to advance and push forward. The science and how we get the best care to our patients in the most timely fashion I think is really important. Culture is hard to change, and we all work in institutions that have various different cultures. I think that healthcare provider to healthcare provider, I think open lines of communication are great. I tell folks, text, call, email, whatever you need to do to get patients in a timely fashion is necessary.

I think the understanding of we are one person working within a team is really necessary. So patients might say, oh, Dr. Gamble this, Dr. Gamble that, but I always, always, always tell them that I cannot do this work without my nurse navigator, without my fellow, without my residents, without my inpatient floor nurses, the oncology nurses, and really understanding that oncology care specifically is a really big team sport.

And healthcare leaders, when we’re thinking about things from a system level, I think sometimes have different like just help making sure that everybody understands how much of a team sport that this is. How much the radiation oncologists, the medical oncologists interface with us on a regular basis, I think is really important. And to understand that we’re all in this together to deliver the best care to our patients. I really think the role of health, like nurse navigators and lay navigators needs to be further pushed forward within our field, including not only gynecologic oncology, but just gynecology in general, and that’s some of the work that I’m doing from a research standpoint now. And so I’d love to see the role of navigators be fully embraced and somehow reimbursed by healthcare systems in general.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Absolutely. Well, it is time to wrap up this roundtable. I have really enjoyed talking with both of you as always. I have learned a lot. I’m sure that our audience will learn a lot from this conversation. And before we go, I’d love to get closing thoughts. So I’m going to start with you, Dr. Gogoi. What is one takeaway message that you would like to leave with the healthcare professionals who will watch this program?

Dr. Radhika Gogoi:

So I guess the one takeaway would be that, as I think about my role in sort of disparities prevention, if you say it is really as an educator, and so the importance of community education on symptoms, on diagnosis, on treatment approaches, I think it’s essential that we don’t think of ourselves as a silo. I’m not just, but I’m part of the larger community as Dr. Gamble spoke about. And to be part of that larger community means that I need to be within that community and function within the community. So whether it’s me, community navigators, health educators to really play a role in educating our patients about how to approach their symptoms.

Dr. Nicole Rochester: 

Wonderful. Thank you, Dr. Gogoi. And what about you, Dr. Gamble, what’s your closing thought that you would like to leave with the audience?

Dr. Charlotte Gamble: 

Yeah, I think for healthcare providers in general, I think the thing that I think is most important is, again, being able to listen to patients, working and encouraging the systems that we are housed into, be able to be responsive to them, so that if patients are educated, do know that there’s something wrong. They’re able to not only get a hold of someone, but also be listened to and heard and taken seriously. And we have a lot to do in that regard. So I think just understanding again, our role and how privileged we are to be in our jobs, in this line of work, and being able to leverage that to listen to patients and get them the timely care that they need.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Wonderful. Well, thank you both again, Dr. Gogoi, Dr. Gamble, thank you for this enlightening conversation. We’ve learned so much about endometrial cancer. I think for me, the main takeaway is postmenopausal bleeding, abnormal irregular bleeding is never normal. It needs to be evaluated. You both spoke about the importance of biopsy and not just an ultrasound, and in fact that ultrasound can be normal.

And with regard to disparities, I really appreciate both of your thoughts around community education, and this being a team sport and listening to our patients. So again, thank you so much for being here today, and thank you all for watching the program and tuning into this Empowering Providers to Empower Patients, Patient Empowerment Network program. I’m Dr. Nicole Rochester. Thanks again for watching.


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Peer Insights: Fostering Clinic-Wide Engagement for Myeloma Clinical Trials

Peer Insights: Fostering Clinic-Wide Engagement for Myeloma Clinical Trials from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

Dr. Craig Cole from Karmanos Cancer Institute speaks to the success of clinical trials relying on not only provider endorsement, but also on the collective enthusiasm and involvement of all healthcare staff, which cultivates a patient-centric culture promoting myeloma trial participation and engagement.

See More from EPEP Myeloma

Related Resources:

Peer Insights: Maximizing Myeloma Patient Care

Peer Insights: Maximizing Myeloma Patient Care 

HCP Strategies for Navigating the Pre-trial Eligibility and Informed Consent Process

HCP Strategies for Navigating the Pre-trial Eligibility and Informed Consent Process 

How Can Myeloma HCPs Overcome Unforeseen Practice Related Barriers?

How Can Myeloma HCPs Overcome Unforeseen Practice Related Barriers? 

Transcript:

Dr. Craig Cole:

Some of the other barriers to clinical trials, the nurses and the other staff in the cancer center aren’t aware of the clinical trials, that when a patient goes through the clinic, they talk to more than just the provider. They talk to the treatment nurses, they talk to the intake people, they talk to the MAs, they talk to the scheduling people. And there was a study that was done a few years ago in looking at patients who were given consent forms and declined clinical trials. And they found that a lot of patients declined clinical trials, were because they said that, well, their doctor didn’t want them on the trial.

And when they looked further into that, they saw that, well, the doctor offered them a clinical trial, but when they discussed the clinical trial with a nurse practitioner, when they discussed that trial with a treatment nurse or the MA or any of the other staff, when they didn’t know about the clinical trial, that was considered well, if you don’t know about the clinical trial, it must not be good for me. And then they withdrew from the trial.

It really shouldn’t be left in the provider compartment. That excitement should be clinic-wide. And when you have that all-in approach where everybody’s involved, everyone’s excited about clinical trials, it produces a culture of clinical trials that everybody wants to be part of, and the patients then can jump on that bus and feel comfortable participating in the trial. 

Peer Insights: Maximizing Myeloma Patient Care

Peer Insights: Maximizing Myeloma Patient Care from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

Dr. Beth Faiman shares how clinical trials offer vital support for myeloma patients by providing access to a diverse team of healthcare professionals. Despite existing challenges, such as outdated procedures, practice barriers within the hospital organization and scope of practice limitations, Dr. Faiman speaks to the pivotal role of multidisciplinary teams for maximizing myeloma patient care.

See More from EPEP Myeloma

Related Resources:

Peer Insights: Fostering Clinic-Wide Engagement for Myeloma Clinical Trials

Peer Insights: Fostering Clinic-Wide Engagement for Myeloma Clinical Trials 

How Can Myeloma HCPs and Nurses Help Manage Patient Concerns?

How Can Myeloma HCPs and Nurses Help Manage Patient Concerns?

Do Myeloma Treatment Advancements Create Care Challenges?

Do Myeloma Treatment Advancements Create Care Challenges? 

Transcript:

Dr. Beth Faiman:

How can we harness all of our resources to provide the best care to that patient? And clinical trials are one of them. Clinical trials will offer support so that the patient can have access to a pharmacist, a social worker, a dedicated nurse, a dedicated line to call if they’re having a symptom. But to speak to some of the outdated procedures, again, it goes to scope of the practice. No matter how highly trained they are experientially or with credentialing, there are practice barriers within the hospital organization within state laws.

The nice thing about clinical trials though, is that nurses in most institutions are very able to watch that clinical protocol. They’ll look for who needs to hold a medication because of toxicity, consult with the provider, and then they’ll say, “Okay, hold your dose. And when your toxicity resolves, reduce it one dose level, and come back for labs,” or whatever that would entail. So while there are outdated practices historically, I think that within clinical trials nursing it provides some more autonomy for oncology nurses, again, as a part of that multidisciplinary team to enhance patient care.

Recognizing Implicit Bias and Respecting Myeloma Patients’ Choices

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Recognizing Implicit Bias and Respecting Myeloma Patients’ Choices

Download Infographic

See More From EPEP Multiple Myeloma

Empowering Multiple Myeloma Providers to Empower Their Patients

Empowering patients is at the heart of efforts at Patient Empowerment Network (PEN), and work toward reducing health disparities is part of conversations among healthcare professionals. With this in mind, PEN has taken on a new initiative for multiple myeloma, the Empowering Providers to Empower Patients (EPEP) initiative. The program expands PEN’s reach to healthcare professionals with the goal to improve physician-patient communication; shared decision-making; and the role that myeloma patients, survivors, care partners, and healthcare professionals each play in the shared decision-making process.

The EPEP initiative includes the following resources:

  • EPEP Roundtables with Dr. Nicole Rochester and myeloma experts Dr. Beth Faiman, Dr. Craig Cole, RuthAnn Gordon and Charise Gleason discuss a range of topics including how to help your myeloma patients play an active role in managing their care, healthcare provider recommended strategies for managing disease burden, the importance of advanced practice clinicians on the myeloma health care team, and ins and outs of clinical trials and communication about clinical trials.
  • EPEP Resources provides the resource guide, infographics, blog, peer insight videos, and other resources to improve patient care.
  • EPEP Portal utilizes PEN’s robust resource library and that of numerous trusted advocacy partners to create a vetted list of patient education resources to share with your patients. PEN delivers a curated PDF according to the patient’s interests and delivers it efficiently to their inbox.

Panel of Experts

Key Takeaways from Myeloma Experts

PEN had the opportunity to interview experts Dr. Beth Faiman, RuthAnn Gordon, Charise Gleason,  and Dr. Craig Cole to learn about some of their expertise. They shared their views about essential ways that they work with patients to help empower them and to inform them about research and clinical trials.

The number of myeloma treatment options has expanded tremendously over the past few decades, and nurses play a key role in helping patients. Expert Dr. Beth Faiman from Taussig Cancer Institute shared her perspective about how patient care has changed. “…the difference from before when we had very few available therapies to now we have an armamentarium of drugs, and so deciding whether or not to participate in a clinical trial is super important.

And how can we support our patients who are now living a longer life span with all these cumulative physical and financial issues? How can the nurses support the patients to get the access to the drugs and access to the financial resources they need so that they continue living a good quality of life?…I think nurses can fill that critical gap of finding resources for patients to allow them to participate in clinical trials to live a better life.” 

The expansion of treatment options has also generated some more complex clinical trials. Expert research nurse RuthAnn Gordon from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center explained the role of research nurses in these more involved trials. “…we’re guiding them, we’re educating them, we’re ensuring that they do understand the potential side effects, but do understand also what their role is in the clinical trial and what they can expect. And I think that in terms of what has changed is that we have really put more value on the fact that having that nurse that has the expertise in the clinical trial and really can gatekeep all of the patient care coordination that that involves from a clinician experience and from a clinician perspective, has really helped to ensure that our patients are ready, that we can do our very complex trials.”

Panel of Experts

Solutions for Reducing Myeloma Disparities

Another essential factor in clinical trial participation is educating patients about trials. Black myeloma patients comprise 20 percent of myeloma patients but only 4 percent of myeloma clinical trial participants. Expert Dr. Craig Cole from Karmanos Cancer Institute shared his perspective about how informing all healthcare members can create a more inviting atmosphere around clinical trials. “We make sure that the treatment nurses, the MAs, the intake people know what we’re doing, know about our clinical trials, because that’s the fun part about what we do.

The fun part is when we say, look, my goodness, this four-drug therapy had a 100 percent response rate. That shouldn’t be left in the physician compartment. It really shouldn’t be left in the provider compartment. That excitement should be clinic-wide. And when you have that all-in approach where everybody’s involved, everyone’s excited about clinical trials, it produces a culture of clinical trials that everybody wants to be part of, and the patients then can jump on that bus and feel comfortable participating in the trial.

Involving  the entire myeloma team is truly key in expanding patient care. Expert research nurse Charise Gleason from Winship Cancer Institute explained the success they’ve seen with their team members and in their clinical trial participation rate. “The myeloma team, we have APPs who are off that day who call in for this meeting, because we go over our patients, we talk about what’s, clinical trials are available, that’s just how we practice and we think about that.  The myeloma team, we have APPs who are off that day who call in for this meeting, because we go over our patients, we talk about what’s, clinical trials are available, that’s just how we practice and we think about that.

In Atlanta, in our database, 40 percent of our data is based on Black patients. And we enroll about 32 percent to 33 percent of Black patients on clinical trials. And what our work on trials has showed us too, if you give the same access to every patient, you have good outcomes and good outcomes for Black patients, if not better, than white patients. So we all need to be versed on that, whether you’re the research nurse, the clinic nurse, the physician, the advanced practice. And so we really do bring that approach to taking care of our patients.”

Even though myeloma treatments have shown increases in the number and complexity of treatment options, vital HCP best practices can help further expansion and in empowering myeloma patients. How do we improve care of patients? And how do we work to remove barriers to clinical trial participation? We hope healthcare providers can take advantage of these timely resources of the EPEP myeloma initiative to work toward equitable and inclusive care for all myeloma patients.

How Can Myeloma Care Providers Engage Patient Interest in Clinical Trials?

How Can Myeloma Care Providers Engage Patient Interest in Clinical Trials? from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

What are some ways that myeloma care providers can increase interest in clinical trials? Dr. Craig Cole from Karmanos Cancer Institute and advanced practice provider Charise Gleason share insight on information they provide to patients and ways they improve communication about clinical trials.

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See More from EPEP Myeloma

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Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

I’m going to go to each of you just to share maybe one takeaway that you’d like to leave with the audience. So I’ll start with you, Dr. Cole, one takeaway.

Dr. Craig Cole:

One takeaway. I actually thought about this, but I think that the biggest takeaway is, if I can squeeze two in.

Is that, is to remember that basically they’re all patients want to be involved in clinical trials and the ownership of having patients on clinical trials is really on us to really talk to them over a longitudinal period, to talk about clinical trials, to have them involved. To not look at a patient saying, “No, they don’t want to be on clinical trial.” That you really engage that patient to tell them about really the incredible progress that we’ve made, how competitive clinical trials are and how exciting it is to be part of that research environment. And that would be my one, my two sort of closing thoughts.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

And what about you, Ms. Gleason?

Charise Gleason:

Dr. Cole said it well. Please discuss this with your patient. Listen to them. Listen to their concerns. Don’t make decisions for them based on bias that maybe you’re bringing in. Don’t make decisions based on maybe it’s too far. Patients drive hours to go on clinical trials, and let’s give them the information and have that conversation.


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How Can Myeloma HCPs and Nurses Help Manage Patient Concerns?

How Can Myeloma HCPs and Nurses Help Manage Patient Concerns? from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

How can myeloma care providers help in managing clinical trial concerns? Dr. Craig Cole from Karmanos Cancer Institute and advanced practice provider Charise Gleason discuss common concerns that they have encountered with patients and how they addressed the concerns.

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See More from EPEP Myeloma

Related Resources:

How Can Myeloma HCPs Initiate Clinical Trial Conversations?

How Can Myeloma Care Providers Engage Patient Interest in Clinical Trials?

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

How do we mitigate and manage concerns despite all these wonderful things that both of you have shared? I’m sure that patients and family members have concerns about myeloma clinical trials. And so I’ll start with you, Ms. Gleason. And as you hear concerns from patients and families over the years possibly related to fear of randomization, fear of getting the placebo, you all have mentioned some uneasiness about adverse effects. How do you effectively mitigate and manage these concerns with patients and their family members and care partners?

Charise Gleason:

Yeah, you just have to continue to have open communication. And if you’re, if a patient is accustomed to you mentioning clinical trials, then when you present one to them, right? They’re a little more open to it. But not everybody starts with us. And we get referrals in midway and different parts and different paths along the way. But patients we do hear, “I don’t want to get a placebo.” Or you’ll mention a clinical trial and somebody will say, “Am I ready for hospice?” And it’s, you have to go back and start that education again that, no, you’re getting good treatment on this, a registry trial, for instance, you’re going to get standard of care treatment plus or minus something else, right? And so we really have to go back and educate that you are getting treatment. You’re going to be watched closer than any of our other patients actually.

You’ve got a whole team around you that’s talking about your trial and our patients every week. And so I think that our excitement and our being positive, we can get those patients to enroll on trials. I think something that makes me really happy is, we keep a list of every treatment line, and when you go through and it’s like standard of care, clinical trial, clinical trial, standard..it’s we’ve done the right thing then, right? Our patient has had full advantage of what’s available to them when we do that.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

That’s wonderful. Thank you for sharing that. 

What about you, Dr. Cole? Do you have anything to add with regard to managing the concerns that come up?

Dr. Craig Cole: 

Yeah. The one thing that I tell patients, and I tell patients one-to-one, and when I do talks for some of the efficacy groups that I tell lots of patients that. That in 2024, myeloma trials are incredibly competitive. And the only, the best, best drugs, now float to the top as part of our clinical trial portfolio. There were days I remember begging companies for clinical trials saying, “Please, please think about myeloma.” And we were struggling.

Now, it is incredibly competitive, and that competition does a fantastic thing for patients because what we see in the clinical trial portfolio are drugs that are safer and safer and safer, and drugs that are more effective and more effective. When you go to these meetings and the expectation is that our response rate needs to be over 60 percent, then you know that the clinical trial mail you, that we work with them, is of a super high quality, which you really can’t say for a lot of other types of cancer.

So I tell patients that their fears that they have are absolutely justified. And one thing we teach the fellows, the residents and the medical students, is that you validate those concerns and you listen to those concerns and you don’t ignore it or blow through it. That you absolutely…those are the most important parts of that conversation. And if you don’t validate it, the patient says, “Well, I have a fear of randomization.” And you go, “Hmm, there’s no such thing.” Then that’s not validating. And that’s not even listening. That’s just moving on because you don’t have that concern, but you’re not bringing that, you’re not validating the patient’s concern. And so you have to be very, very careful in doing that because there are multiple studies that have shown those are the big concerns.

 Also, bringing up the things that are facilitators for clinical trials, that if there is an opportunity for reimbursement for travel or reimbursement for hotel stays or reimbursement that we say that this trial has a reimbursement program, or if we say that use other things that help facilitate clinical trials like speaking to the family, not just speaking to a patient, but speaking to the caregiver and speaking to the extended family that that patient will have a conversation with are really important conversation because the more people that you can talk to, that’s part of that patient’s decision-making group, which can be very different from patient to patient based on their culture, the more likely you are to get a consensus among that decision-making group for the patient to go on a clinical trial.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Those are great tips


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How Can Myeloma HCPs Initiate Clinical Trial Conversations?

How Can Myeloma HCPs Initiate Clinical Trial Conversations? from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

How can myeloma healthcare professionals start clinical trial conversations? Dr. Craig Cole from Karmanos Cancer Institute shares how he initiates conversations with newly diagnosed patients and how myeloma community groups also help patients and families.

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How Can Myeloma HCPs and Nurses Help Manage Patient Concerns?

How Can Myeloma Care Providers Engage Patient Interest in Clinical Trials?

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Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

That’s an amazing success story. Thank you for sharing that. What about you, Dr. Cole, with regard to potential strategies for healthcare providers, what are some things that they can implement for initiating these clinical trial conversations early in the journey, particularly in the current environment?

Dr. Craig Cole:

Yeah. And Ms. Gleason had mentioned this at kind of the top of our talk about having those conversations on day one. On day one of our patients coming in either as a second opinion, as a new diagnosis, as in whatever setting, we talk about…we have a list that we go through with the patient that talks about their stage or the disease, how we’re going to follow up. And there’s a line that I have to address, which is, clinical trials. So I mentioned our clinical trials, I mentioned on day one. And I think one strategy that other healthcare providers can take is that, even if you don’t have a clinical trial at that time, so right at this moment, we don’t have an upfront clinical trial.

We have one for maintenance therapy, post-transplant, but we don’t have an upfront trial. I mention that. I say that there are clinical trials that are available for your myeloma. Right now we don’t have a clinical trial for upfront myeloma, but we can refer you for a second opinion for an upfront trial if you’re interested or…and we have a clinical trial in maintenance.

So that sets the groundwork that we’re going to talk about clinical trials on every visit. And that it doesn’t come as a surprise. Because the last thing you want to do is that someone is having a relapse and you say, “Oh, we’re going to talk about clinical trials today.”  Because then it’s like, “Oh my goodness, this is a desperation.” This is a desperation move, and it puts a lot of anxiety when you frame it, and we need to do this now as opposed to having on day one.

The second thing that I think really helps is getting patients involved in the myeloma community, especially with the support groups having not only the patients, but their care providers and families involved in the myeloma community. Because the myeloma communities through a lot of the support agencies like the IMF, the MMRF, the HealthTree, they have a very strong clinical trial culture. And when patients get involved, not only is that empowering to see other myeloma patients doing well, but to hear other myeloma patients talk about their experiences in clinical trials really, really helps. And I think the last thing that we use to help patients, go through clinical trials, is a couple of other things, is one, every time we talk about treatment options,  if that is maintenance, if that is smoldering, if that is a relapsed/refractory therapy, we always put clinical trials in that conversation.

 Again, even if we don’t have that clinical trial at our institution, we talk about this as an option that we could refer you out to. And, and then we always talk about…I think one other little thing is that every visit that patients have, I somehow include some of the new things that are happening in myeloma. Now, my patients kind of expect it. They expect. They know when December and June is because when I see them after ASH and ASCO and sometimes they’re like asking, “So what’s new?” And once we get into that groove, they see, gosh. There are response rates that are off the charts with some of these new things. These patients are involved in clinical trials and the myeloma and multiple myeloma research is progressing at such a rate and things are getting better that patients want to be involved in it.

So we’re always talking about new things. Do I go into depth of detail with talquetamab (Talvey) and pomalidomide (Pomalyst). I don’t go into depth of detail. And I say, where I was this clinical trials at our last ASH meeting that combined these two drugs for a relapsed/refractory myeloma, even patients who were refractory to some of the drugs you’re on now. And response rate was like 100 percent. And then when I talk about those clinical trials in the future, they’ll remember, man, that guy was talking, he’s all upset about these clinical trials. Maybe I want to be involved in them. So that’s kind of my few strategies that I use. 

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

I love that. And what I really hear both of you saying is this idea of normalizing conversations about clinical trials and not introducing them as like a Hail Mary, so to speak, but really from the very beginning, letting patients and care partners know that this is a viable treatment option. So I think that is wonderful. And I can say like, your excitement is contagious for me, so I can only imagine how excited the patients that you work with feel.


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How Can Myeloma Nurses Start Clinical Trial Conversations at Start of Care?

How Can Myeloma Nurses Start Clinical Trial Conversations at Start of Care? from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

What are some strategies for myeloma nurses to initiate clinical trial conversations at the outset of care? Advanced practice provider Charise Gleason explains methods her clinic has used for advanced practice providers and the improvements they have observed in their clinical trial participation rates.

Download Resource Guide  |  Descargar guía de recursos

See More from EPEP Myeloma

Related Resources:

Do Myeloma Treatment Advancements Create Care Challenges?

Best Practices: Crafting Myeloma Clinical Trial Conversations to Individual Patient Needs

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Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

We’ve been talking about this team-based approach. We know that nurses serve as key coordinators of care in the myeloma trial setting, as well as other members of the healthcare team. So from your perspective, what are some recommended strategies that you can share to encourage advanced practice providers, specifically how to initiate the clinical trial conversation at the outset of care?

Charise Gleason:  

First, we need to educate our advanced practice providers. So for new APPs coming into our system, part of their onboarding is the research mission, exposing them to the clinical trials, exposing them to what we have available. We have a weekly research meeting, I’m sure Dr. Cole has similar practices. And then our group has a separate meeting once a week, where we meet for two hours. The myeloma team, we have APPs who are off that day who call in for this meeting, because we go over our patients, we talk about what clinical trials are available, that’s just how we practice and we think about that.

I would like to add to that, referring to a center early is so essential as well, and for us to start having that conversation. And I’ll talk a little bit to build on something Dr. Cole said with our patient population.In Atlanta, in our database, 40 percent of our data is based on Black patients. And we enroll about 32 percent to 33 percent of Black patients on clinical trials. And what our work on trials has showed us too, if you give the same access to every patient, you have good outcomes and good outcomes for Black patients, if not better, than white patients. So we all need to be versed on that, whether you’re the research nurse, the clinic nurse, the physician, the advanced practice. And so we really do bring that approach to taking care of our patients.

 And then, managing those side effects and having that open dialogue. So patients aren’t surprised by things. And I’ll use talquetamab (Talvey), for instance. We have a patient who is still on the original trial, who relapsed on a BCMA targeted therapy. Early on, these side effects were new to everybody. And she wanted to come off the trial month end. And it was that education piece and working with her, holding the drug, that now almost two years later, she’s still in remission, tolerating the drug. And so those are the stories and these are the experiences we have. We’re giving really good drugs on clinical trials, and patients are responding well.


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How Can Myeloma HCPs Overcome Unforeseen Practice Related Barriers?

How Can Myeloma HCPs Overcome Unforeseen Practice Related Barriers? from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

What are some solutions to myeloma patient care barriers? Expert Dr. Craig Cole from Karmanos Cancer Institute discusses barriers and solutions he has encountered with his patients and how patient comfort levels with clinical trials have improved.

Download Resource Guide  |  Descargar guía de recursos

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Do Myeloma Treatment Advancements Create Care Challenges?

Best Practices: Crafting Myeloma Clinical Trial Conversations to Individual Patient Needs

How Can Myeloma Nurses Start Clinical Trial Conversations at Start of Care?

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Dr. Cole, I’m going to turn the conversation back to you. As a physician, I know that often, there are some barriers just as part of our everyday practice that can hinder our work. And so I’d love for you to speak to any unforeseen or outdated practice related barriers that you feel may hinder your work, and the work of your colleagues specifically as it relates to myeloma trials. And then if you could also share some potential solutions to those barriers.

Dr. Craig Cole:

Yes, super good question. I love this question. There are a lot that are out there that I…barriers that I hear providers talk about at other academic centers and in the community. One is that patients don’t want to go on clinical trials that they…and some of that is subconscious bias. Sometimes those are true, true bias. We know the FDA knows all the drug companies all, and I think every myeloma provider knows that there have been horrific disparities in the enrollment of patients in clinical trials based on race and age and ethnicity that the FDA looked at some of the data of trials that were going for FDA approval, and found that over the past 10 years, and that in those trials, that only 4 percent of the population of the trials were Black.

While in the United States, the number of Black myeloma patients is about 20 percent, over 20 percent of the myeloma population. So that’s a huge disparity. And what I hear is that while older patients and Black and Hispanic and Asian patients don’t want to go on clinical trials, and that’s not true. That’s been shown in multiple clinical trials that actually, the patients of different ethnicities and races actually are more likely to go on clinical trials than other racial groups. And so I think that it’s really important to keep that in mind that patients really…that really the ownership of getting a patient on a clinical trial is really on us to present the clinical trial option to them with every single conversation that we have.

Some of the other barriers to clinical trials is, and Ms. Gleason had mentioned this, what they do at through the Emory system is that, well, the nurses and the other staff in the cancer center aren’t aware of the clinical trials, that when a patient goes through the clinic, they talk to more than just the provider. They talk to the treatment nurses, they talk to the intake people, they talked to the MAs, they talked to the scheduling people.

And there was a study that was done a few years ago in looking at patients who were given consent forms and declined clinical trials. And they found that a lot of patients declined clinical trials, well, because they said that, well, their doctor didn’t want them on the trial. And when they looked further into that, they saw that, well, the doctor offered them a clinical trial, but when they discussed the clinical trial with a nurse practitioner, when they discussed that trial with a treatment nurse or the MA or any of the other staff, when they didn’t know about the clinical trial, that was considered well, if you don’t know about the clinical trial, it must not be good for me. And then they withdrew from the trial.

So just like what they do, what Ms. Gleason had said, we have an all-in approach. We make sure that the treatment nurses, the MAs, the intake people know what we’re doing, know about our clinical trials, because that’s the fun part about what we do. The fun part is when we say, look, my goodness, this four-drug therapy had a 100 percent response rate. That shouldn’t be left in the physician compartment. It really shouldn’t be left in the provider compartment. That excitement should be clinic-wide. And when you have that all-in approach where everybody’s involved, everyone’s excited about clinical trials, it produces a culture of clinical trials that everybody wants to be part of, and the patients then can jump on that bus and feel comfortable participating in the trial.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Wow. Thank you for elucidating that. Both the issue of the health disparities that we see in clinical trials and the need to diversify that clinical trial patient population, some of those biases that exist, as well as really lifting up this idea of creating a culture of clinical trials.I love the language that you use for that and the idea that everyone throughout the entire clinical encounter needs to be both aware of, and excited about the clinical trials that are underway. 


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Best Practices: Crafting Myeloma Clinical Trial Conversations to Individual Patient Needs

Best Practices: Crafting Myeloma Clinical Trial Conversations to Individual Patient Needs from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

What are some ways for myeloma nurses and care providers to optimize patient care? Advanced practice provider Charise Gleason shares her perspective on how care team members support patients and collaborate with physicians and research team members. 

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See More from EPEP Myeloma

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Do Myeloma Treatment Advancements Create Care Challenges?

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How Can Myeloma Nurses Start Clinical Trial Conversations at Start of Care?

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

So certainly, this conversation alludes to the fact that the clinical trials regarding these medications are also increasingly complex. And so I’m going to go to you, Ms. Gleason, because we know that nurses and advanced practice providers provide understanding of these trials, including potential benefits and risks, and all of the things that are required as they consider participating in a trial. And then, as you all have both shared, there is some tailoring around the treatment with regard to the disease state, whether it’s relapsing, whether it’s refractory. So with that in mind, do you have any best practices around tailoring the trial conversation with regard to specific patient needs and situations?

Charise Gleason:

Well, I’ll start with, we bring that discussion with all of our patients about the potential of a clinical trial from the start. And so we’re all versed on that, we all look to what clinical trial could be available for this patient. So we’re used to having that conversation. So our teams all need to be educated, participate in our research meetings, so we are ready to discuss a trial on that. We sometimes get to spend more time with patients, and we get to know our patients.

These are patients we see frequently, and so we can have those conversations. You might have somebody who’s starting to have a biochemical progression. It’s not time to change their therapy yet, but we’re already thinking about what’s that next line of therapy. And so as we start to approach that with clinical trials and standard of care, and opening that dialogue, so it’s really that communication and that rapport and relationship you have with your patient, and that care partner. So an ongoing conversation about the different treatments that are available to them.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

So we know that patients with myeloma are living longer lives based on everything that you all have shared, and with that comes a different set of options and challenges.  And you also have alluded to this team-based approach, Ms. Gleason, and we know that there’s a critical role that advanced practice providers play in the myeloma clinical trial setting. So I’d love for you to speak to that..the role that advanced practice providers play in myeloma clinical trials. 

Charise Gleason:  

Yeah, the advanced practice providers have started specializing like our physicians do, and we have that collaborative relationship, and we are part of that team approach to take care of our patients. So we’re identifying patients for potential clinical trials. Our scope of practice does vary a little bit from state to state. So in some cases, we can also enroll patients. If we’re not able to do that, though, we can already have discussed the trial, discussed side effects, presented them with the consent.

So when they do meet with the physician, they’ve already seen a lot of that information, and then they can ask further questions with the physician. I think the other big role that we play in the clinic setting is we see these patients, we see these patients for follow-up. So we’re doing a lot of management of the side effects, supportive care through the trials. We might be a little more available during the week, so if a patient’s here on another day, and they’ve got something going on, we’re answering those portal questions, and calling patients back and  just really collaborating with our physicians and also the research team.


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Do Myeloma Treatment Advancements Create Care Challenges?

Do Myeloma Treatment Advancements Create Care Challenges? from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

Are multiple myeloma treatment advancements creating challenges in patient care? Dr. Craig Cole from Karmanos Cancer Institute and advanced practice provider Charise Gleason discuss advancements in myeloma treatment options and combinations and navigating the rapid pace of new treatment information.

Download Resource Guide  |  Descargar guía de recursos

See More from EPEP Myeloma

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Best Practices: Crafting Myeloma Clinical Trial Conversations to Individual Patient Needs

How Can Myeloma HCPs Overcome Unforeseen Practice Related Barriers?

How Can Myeloma Nurses Start Clinical Trial Conversations at Start of Care?

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

We know that there has been rapid advancement in the myeloma sphere. Can you speak to how the introduction of novel drugs, treatment combinations and therapeutic modalities may pose some challenges for healthcare providers as they attempt to explain the sequence of treatment in relation to available clinical trials?

Dr. Craig Cole: 

Yeah, that’s a really good question, especially because so many things have been changing in myeloma, and such a rapid secession. It really, it’s been kind of not only an incredible transformative past 20 years in myeloma as we’ve moved away from using chemotherapy to using really targeted therapy, but really in the past five to 10 years, and us using immunotherapy and now T-cell directed therapy, it’s been transformative.

And it’s been very, very difficult for myeloma experts to kind of configure how these treatments are sequenced, and how the clinical trials are conducted. But basically, we have gone from using single drug therapies to using combination therapies for refractory patients to using multiple modalities and as upfront therapy for myeloma. Up until today, us using four-drug induction therapies with IMiDs proteasome inhibitors and now immunotherapy with anti-CD38 therapy being used upfront.

 Now, we have…we’re on the fact we are past the horizon of using T-cell directed therapy for relapsed/refractory myeloma. Those are now being put in combinations. And at the last meetings, we saw data in combining talquetamab with the bispecific antibody with pomalidomide (Pomalyst) having incredible response rates to 99 percent to a 100 percent. The combination of using daratumumab (Darzalex) with teclistamab (Tecvayli) at ASCO a couple of years ago having very, very, very high response rates for relapsed/refractory patients. And, of course, the combination of using two bispecific antibodies talquetamab (Talvey) and teclistamab together having, again, in these incredible response rates and for relapsed/refractory myeloma. So in very quick orders, we’re going to see those therapies moving further and further upfront, which is a huge benefit to patients.

But it can be kind of difficult to keep up with all the changes in myeloma, especially as we move from using these drugs as single agents, to using them in combination. And not only to speak to using some of the newer drugs like Mezigdomide in combination with daratumumab, having one of the CELMoDs having very, very high response rates. And so it’s exciting, but it does, it’s a challenge to discuss clinical trials with patients, because so many things have changed. We now have clinical trials across the spectrum of myeloma, using bispecifics as upfront and smoldering myeloma, which was at the last ASH meeting to using again, more novel therapies upfront and relapsed/refractory space and in the maintenance therapy space.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Well, that’s all very exciting, and I appreciate you sharing that because as you’ve said, there’s been a really kind of an explosion for lack of a better word, in the numbers of treatments that are available as well as increasing improvements and results. But as you shared, having all of these different modalities available can definitely cause some confusion even among those who do this every day. Do you have anything to add to that, Ms. Gleason?

Charise Gleason:

No, I think, well, I think Dr. Cole described that perfectly. It’s an exciting time, and also a challenging time, which just really brings you back to that team care approach to your patient, and how all of us need to work hard to keep up to date on the latest information. Dr. Cole mentioned quadruplet therapy, and we’ve got two clinical trials that have essentially told us if you add that quadruple therapy and add that antibody upfront, you drive that deeper response. So we change our practice probably sooner in the academic settings. And it’s really how do we get this out to other healthcare providers in our referral basis that send patients to us? And then also, how do we do maintenance? And I think Dr. Cole would agree most of us risk-stratify for that maintenance setting too, whether it’s one drug or multi-drug, depending on our patient’s disease.


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HCP Roundtable: Critical Clinical Trial Conversations in the Expanding Myeloma Landscape

HCP Roundtable: Critical Clinical Trial Conversations in the Expanding Myeloma Landscape from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

Treatment options for multiple myeloma have increased substantially, mainly attributed to advancements in clinical trials. More than ever, HCPs having conversations about trials is critical. Given that underrepresented communities bear a disproportionate burden of multiple myeloma, it becomes imperative to shift this paradigm.

What are the optimal approaches to initiate these conversations early in the patient journey? How should HCPs effectively communicate information about clinical trials to patients and their families, including care partners? Myeloma experts Dr. Craig Cole and Charise Gleason lend their expertise, offering insights into best practices and guidance on the next steps to be taken.

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Related Resources:

Evolving Myeloma Clinical Trial Discussions Amid a Dynamic Treatment Landscape

HCP Strategies for Navigating the Pre-trial Eligibility and Informed Consent Process

HCP Roundtable: Best Practices for Talking About Clinical Trials With Myeloma Patients

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Welcome to this Empowering Providers to Empower Patients Program. I’m Dr. Nicole Rochester, founder and CEO of Your GPS Doc. EPEP is a patient empowerment network program that serves as a secure space for healthcare providers to learn techniques for improving patient-physician communication and overcome practice barriers. In this

Myeloma roundtable, we are tackling critical clinical trial conversations in the expanding myeloma landscape. Some of the things we’ll discuss during this program include, how to explain the sequence of myeloma treatment and how clinical trials fit in. Healthcare provider to healthcare provider, recommended strategies for initiating clinical trial conversations early in the myeloma patient journey, and how to effectively mitigate and manage concerns regarding clinical trials through education, and continuously encourage patients and their care partners to ask questions.

It is my honor and privilege to be joined by Charise Gleason, vice President and Chief Advanced Practice Officer for Emory Healthcare, and adjunct faculty at the Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing at Emory University. Ms. Gleason leads the physician assistants and nurse practitioners across Emory Healthcare, overseeing clinical practice, quality, safety, and education. Thank you so much for joining us today, Ms. Gleason.

Charise Gleason:

Thank you so much for having me.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

We’re also joined by Dr. Craig Cole, a board certified hematologist. Dr. Cole leads multiple clinical trials in multiple myeloma, and has worked extensively with patient advocacy groups to empower, educate, and bring equitable care to everyone. Thank you so much for joining us today, Dr. Cole.

Dr. Craig Cole:

Yeah, and thank you for the invitation.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

While this conversation can be broadly beneficial, in this program, we are speaking to the unique needs of myeloma patients and families. So let’s get started with how to explain the sequence of myeloma treatment, and how available clinical trials fit in. So I’m going to start with you, Dr. Cole. We know that there has been rapid advancement in the myeloma sphere. Can you speak to how the introduction of novel drugs, treatment combinations and therapeutic modalities may pose some challenges for healthcare providers as they attempt to explain the sequence of treatment in relation to available clinical trials?

Dr. Craig Cole:

Yeah, that’s a really good question, especially because so many things have been changing in myeloma, and such a rapid secession. It really, it’s been kind of not only an incredible transformative past 20 years in myeloma as we’ve moved away from using chemotherapy to using really targeted therapy, but really in the past five to 10 years, and us using immunotherapy and now T-cell directed therapy, it’s been transformative.

And it’s been very, very difficult for myeloma experts to kind of configure how these treatments are sequenced, and how the clinical trials are conducted. But basically, we have gone from using single drug therapies to using combination therapies for refractory patients to using multiple modalities and as upfront therapy for myeloma. Up until today, us using four-drug induction therapies with IMiDs proteasome inhibitors and now immunotherapy with anti-CD38 therapy being used upfront.

Now, we have…we’re on the fact we are past the horizon of using T-cell directed therapy for relapsed/refractory myeloma. Those are now being put in combinations. And at the last meetings, we saw data in combining talquetamab with the bispecific antibody with pomalidomide (Pomalyst) having incredible response rates to 99 percent to a 100 percent. The combination of using daratumumab (Darzalex)with teclistamab (Tecvidli) at ASCO a couple of years ago having very, very, very high response rates for relapsed/refractory patients.

And, of course, the combination of using two bispecific antibodies talquetamab (Talvey) and teclistamab together having, again, in these incredible response rates and for relapse refractory myeloma. So in very quick orders, we’re going to see those therapies moving further and further upfront, which is a huge benefit to patients.

But it can be kind of difficult to keep up with all the changes in myeloma, especially as we move from using these drugs as single agents, to using them in combination. And not only to speak to using some of the newer drugs like Mezigdomide in combination with daratumumab, having one of the CELMoDs having very, very high response rates.

And so it’s exciting, but it does, it’s a challenge to discuss clinical trials with patients, because so many things have changed. We now have clinical trials across the spectrum of myeloma, using bispecifics as upfront and smoldering myeloma, which was at the last ASH meeting to using again, more novel therapies upfront and relapsed/refractory space and in the maintenance therapy space.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Well, that’s all very exciting, and I appreciate you sharing that because as you’ve said, there’s been a really kind of an explosion for lack of a better word, in the numbers of treatments that are available as well as increasing improvements and results. But as you shared, having all of these different modalities available can definitely cause some confusion even among those who do this every day. Do you have anything to add to that, Ms. Gleason?

Charise Gleason:

No, I think, well, I think Dr. Cole described that perfectly. It’s an exciting time, and also a challenging time, which just really brings you back to that team care approach to your patient, and how all of us need to work hard to keep up to date on the latest information. Dr. Cole mentioned quadruplet therapy, and we’ve got two clinical trials that have essentially told us. if you add that quadruple therapy and add that antibody upfront, you drive that deeper response.

So we change our practice probably sooner in the academic settings. And it’s really how do we get this out to other healthcare providers in our referral basis that send patients to us? And then also, how do we do maintenance? And I think Dr. Cole would agree most of us risk-stratify for that maintenance setting too, whether it’s one drug or multi-drug, depending on our patient’s disease.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:  

Wonderful. So certainly, this conversation alludes to the fact that the clinical trials regarding these medications are also increasingly complex. And so I’m going to go to you, Ms. Gleason, because we know that nurses and advanced practice providers provide understanding of these trials, including potential benefits and risks, and all of the things that are required as they consider participating in a trial. And then, as you all have both shared, there is some tailoring around the treatment with regard to the disease state, whether it’s relapsing, whether it’s refractory. So with that in mind, do you have any best practices around tailoring the trial conversation with regard to specific patient needs and situations?

Charise Gleason:

Well, I’ll start with, we bring that discussion with all of our patients about the potential of a clinical trial from the start. And so we’re all versed on that, we all look to what clinical trial could be available for this patient. So we’re used to having that conversation. So our teams all need to be educated, participate in our research meetings, so we are ready to discuss a trial on that. We sometimes get to spend more time with patients, and we get to know our patients. These are patients we see frequently, and so we can have those conversations.

You might have somebody who’s starting to have a biochemical progression. It’s not time to change their therapy yet, but we’re already thinking about what’s that next line of therapy. And so as we start to approach that with clinical trials and standard of care, and opening that dialogue, so it’s really that communication and that rapport and relationship you have with your patient, and that care partner. So an ongoing conversation about the different treatments that are available to them.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

So we know that patients with myeloma are living longer lives based on everything that you all have shared, and with that comes a different set of options and challenges.  And you also have alluded to this team-based approach, Ms. Gleason, and we know that there’s a critical role that advanced practice providers play in the myeloma clinical trial setting. So I’d love for you to speak to that..the role that advanced practice providers play in myeloma clinical trials.

Charise Gleason:

Yeah, the advanced practice providers have started specializing like our physicians do, and we have that collaborative relationship, and we are part of that team approach to take care of our patients. So we’re identifying patients for potential clinical trials. Our scope of practice does vary a little bit from state to state. So in some cases, we can also enroll patients. If we’re not able to do that, though, we can already have discussed the trial, discussed side effects, presented them with the consent. So when they do meet with the physician, they’ve already seen a lot of that information, and then they can ask further questions with the physician.

I think the other big role that we play in the clinic setting is we see these patients, we see these patients for follow-up. So we’re doing a lot of management of the side effects, supportive care through the trials. We might be a little more available during the week, so if a patient’s here on another day, and they’ve got something going on, we’re answering those portal questions, and calling patients back and just really collaborating with our physicians and also the research team.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Dr. Cole, I’m going to turn the conversation back to you. As a physician, I know that often, there are some barriers just as part of our everyday practice that can hinder our work. And so I’d love for you to speak to any unforeseen or outdated practice related barriers that you feel may hinder your work, and the work of your colleagues specifically as it relates to myeloma trials. And then if you could also share some potential solutions to those barriers.

Dr. Craig Cole: 

Yes, super good question. I love this question. There are a lot that are out there that I…barriers that I hear providers talk about at other academic centers and in the community. One is that patients don’t want to go on clinical trials that they…and some of that is subconscious bias. Sometimes those are true, true bias. We know the FDA knows all the drug companies all, and I think every myeloma provider knows that there have been horrific disparities in the enrollment of patients in clinical trials based on race and age and ethnicity that the FDA looked at some of the data of trials that were going for FDA approval, and found that over the past 10 years, and that in those trials, that only 4 percent of the population of the trials were Black.

While in the United States, the number of Black myeloma patients is about 20 percent, over 20 percent of the myeloma population. So that’s a huge disparity. And what I hear is that while older patients and Black and Hispanic and Asian patients don’t want to go on clinical trials, and that’s not true. That’s been shown in multiple clinical trials that actually, the patients of different ethnicities and races actually are more likely to go on clinical trials than other racial groups. And so I think that it’s really important to keep that in mind that patients really…that really the ownership of getting a patient on a clinical trial is really on us to present the clinical trial option to them with every single conversation that we have.

 Some of the other barriers to clinical trials is, and Ms. Gleason had mentioned this, what they do at through the Emory system is that, well, the nurses and the other staff in the cancer center aren’t aware of the clinical trials, that when a patient goes through the clinic, they talk to more than just the provider. They talk to the treatment nurses, they talk to the intake people, they talked to the MAs, they talked to the scheduling people.

And there was a study that was done a few years ago in looking at patients who were given consent forms and declined clinical trials. And they found that a lot of patients declined clinical trials, well, because they said that, well, their doctor didn’t want them on the trial. And when they looked further into that, they saw that, well, the doctor offered them a clinical trial, but when they discussed the clinical trial with a nurse practitioner, when they discussed that trial with a treatment nurse or the MA or any of the other staff, when they didn’t know about the clinical trial, that was considered well, if you don’t know about the clinical trial, it must not be good for me. And then they withdrew from the trial.

So just like what they do, what Ms. Gleason had said, we have an all-in approach. We make sure that the treatment nurses, the MAs, the intake people know what we’re doing, know about our clinical trials, because that’s the fun part about what we do. The fun part is when we say, look, my goodness, this four-drug therapy had a 100 percent response rate. That shouldn’t be left in the physician compartment. It really shouldn’t be left in the provider compartment. That excitement should be clinic-wide. And when you have that all-in approach where everybody’s involved, everyone’s excited about clinical trials, it produces a culture of clinical trials that everybody wants to be part of, and the patients then can jump on that bus and feel comfortable participating in the trial.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Wow. Thank you for elucidating that. Both the issue of the health disparities that we see in clinical trials and the need to diversify that clinical trial patient population, some of those biases that exist, as well as really lifting up this idea of creating a culture of clinical trials. I love the language that you use for that and the idea that everyone throughout the entire clinical encounter needs to be both aware of, and excited about the clinical trials that are underway. So I appreciate that.

That leads us nicely into our next segment, which is really focusing on strategies for fellow healthcare providers for initiating clinical trial conversations early in the myeloma patient journey. So I’m going to go back to you, Ms. Gleason. We’ve been talking about this team-based approach. We know that nurses serve as key coordinators of care in the myeloma trial setting, as well as other members of the healthcare team. So from your perspective, what are some recommended strategies that you can share to encourage advanced practice providers, specifically how to initiate the clinical trial conversation at the outset of care?

Charise Gleason:  

First, we need to educate our advanced practice providers. So for new APPs coming into our system, part of their onboarding is the research mission, exposing them to the clinical trials, exposing them to what we have available. We have a weekly research meeting, I’m sure Dr. Cole has similar practices. And then our group has a separate meeting once a week, where we meet for two hours. The myeloma team, we have APPs who are off that day who call in for this meeting, because we go over our patients, we talk about what’s, clinical trials are available, that’s just how we practice and we think about that.

I would like to add to that, referring to a center early is so essential as well, and for us to start having that conversation. And I’ll talk a little bit to build on something Dr. Cole said with our patient population.  In Atlanta, in our database, 40 percent of our data is based on Black patients. And we enroll about 32% to 33% of Black patients on clinical trials. And what our work on trials has showed us too, if you give the same access to every patient, you have good outcomes and good outcomes for Black patients, if not better, than white patients. So we all need to be versed on that, whether you’re the research nurse, the clinic nurse, the physician, the advanced practice. And so we really do bring that approach to taking care of our patients.

And then, managing those side effects and having that open dialogue. So patients aren’t surprised by things. And I’ll use talquetamab for instance. We have a patient who is still on the original trial, who relapsed on a BCMA targeted therapy. Early on, these side effects were new to everybody. And she wanted to come off the trial month end. And it was that education piece and working with her, holding the drug, that now almost two years later, she’s still in remission, tolerating the drug. And so those are the stories and these are the experiences we have. We’re giving really good drugs on clinical trials and patients are responding well.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

That’s an amazing success story. Thank you for sharing that. What about you, Dr. Cole, with regard to potential strategies for healthcare providers, what are some things that they can implement for initiating these clinical trial conversations early in the journey, particularly in the current environment?

Dr. Craig Cole: 

Yeah. And Ms. Gleason had mentioned this at kind of the top of our talk about having those conversations on day one. On day one of our patients coming in either as a second opinion, as a new diagnosis, as in whatever setting, we talk about…we have a list that we go through with the patient that talks about their stage or the disease, how we’re going to follow up. And there’s a line that I have to address, which is, clinical trials. So I mentioned our clinical trials, I mentioned on day one. And I think one strategy that other healthcare providers can take is that, even if you don’t have a clinical trial at that time, so right at this moment, we don’t have an upfront clinical trial.

We have one for maintenance therapy, post-transplant, but we don’t have an upfront trial. I mention that. I say that there are clinical trials that are available for your myeloma. Right now we don’t have a clinical trial for upfront myeloma, but we can refer you for a second opinion for an upfront trial if you’re interested or…and we have a clinical trial in maintenance. So that sets the groundwork that we’re going to talk about clinical trials on every visit. And that it doesn’t come as a surprise. Because the last thing you want to do is that someone is having a relapse and you say, “Oh, we’re going to talk about clinical trials today.”  Because then it’s like, “Oh my goodness, this is a desperation.” This is a desperation move, and it puts a lot of anxiety when you frame it, and we need to do this now as opposed to having on day one.

The second thing that I think really helps is getting patients involved in the myeloma community, especially with the support groups having not only the patients, but their care providers and families involved in the myeloma community. Because the myeloma communities through a lot of the support agencies like the IMF, the MMRF, the HealthTree, they have a very strong clinical trial culture. And when patients get involved, not only is that empowering to see other myeloma patients doing well, but to hear other myeloma patients talk about their experiences in clinical trials really, really helps. And I think the last thing that we use to help patients, go through clinical trials, is a couple of other things, is one, every time we talk about treatment options, if that is maintenance, if that is smoldering, if that is a relapsed/refractory therapy, we always put clinical trials in that conversation.

 Again, even if we don’t have that clinical trial at our institution, we talk about this as an option that we could refer you out to. And, and then we always talk about…I think one other little thing is that every visit that patients have, I somehow include some of the new things that are happening in myeloma. Now, my patients kind of expect it. They expect. They know when December and June is because when I see them after ASH and ASCO and sometimes they’re like asking, “So what’s new?” And once we get into that groove, they see, gosh. There are response rates that are off the charts with some of these new things. These patients are involved in clinical trials and the myeloma and multiple myeloma research is progressing at such a rate and things are getting better that patients want to be involved in it.

So we’re always talking about new things. Do I go into depth of detail with talquetamab and pomalidomide. I don’t go into depth of detail. And I say, where I was this clinical trials at our last ASH meeting that combined these two drugs for a relapsed/refractory myeloma, even patients who were refractory to some of the drugs you’re on now. And response rate was like 100 percent. And then when I talk about those clinical trials in the future, they’ll remember, man, that guy was talking, he’s all upset about these clinical trials. Maybe I want to be involved in them. So that’s kind of my few strategies that I use. 

Dr. Nicole Rochester:  

I love that. And what I really hear both of you saying is this idea of normalizing conversations about clinical trials and not introducing them as like a Hail Mary, so to speak, but really from the very beginning, letting patients and care partners know that this is a viable treatment option. So I think that is wonderful. And I can say like, your excitement is contagious for me, so I can only imagine how excited the patients that you work with feel.

So let’s move on to our final topic. How do we mitigate and manage concerns despite all these wonderful things that both of you have shared? I’m sure that patients and family members have concerns about myeloma clinical trials. And so I’ll start with you, Ms. Gleason. And as you hear concerns from patients and families over the years possibly related to fear of randomization, fear of getting the placebo, you all have mentioned some uneasiness about adverse effects. How do you effectively mitigate and manage these concerns with patients and their family members and care partners?

Charise Gleason:

Yeah, you just have to continue to have open communication. And if you’re, if a patient is accustomed to you mentioning clinical trials, then when you present one to them, right? They’re a little more open to it. But not everybody starts with us. And we get referrals in midway and different parts and different paths along the way. But patients we do hear, “I don’t want to get a placebo.” Or you’ll mention a clinical trial and somebody will say, “Am I ready for hospice?”

And it’s, you have to go back and start that education again that, no, you’re getting good treatment on this, a registry trial, for instance, you’re going to get standard of care treatment plus or minus something else, right? And so we really have to go back and educate that you are getting treatment. You’re going to be watched closer than any of our other patients actually.

You’ve got a whole team around you that’s talking about your trial and our patients every week. And so I think that our excitement and our being positive, we can get those patients to enroll on trials. I think something that makes me really happy is, we keep a list of every treatment line, and when you go through and it’s like standard of care, clinical trial, clinical trial, standard…it’s we’ve done the right thing then, right? Our patient has had full advantage of what’s available to them when we do that. 

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

What about you, Dr. Cole? Do you have anything to add with regard to managing the concerns that come up?

Dr. Craig Cole:

Yeah. The one thing that I tell patients, and I tell patients one-to-one, and when I do talks for some of the efficacy groups that I tell lots of patients that. That in 2024, myeloma trials are incredibly competitive. And the only, the best, best drugs, now float to the top as part of our clinical trial portfolio. There were days I remember begging companies for clinical trials saying, “Please, please think about myeloma.” And we were struggling.

Now, it is incredibly competitive, and that competition does a fantastic thing for patients because what we see in the clinical trial portfolio are drugs that are safer and safer and safer, and drugs that are more effective and more effective. When you go to these meetings and the expectation is that our response rate needs to be over 60%, then you know that the clinical trial mail you, that we work with them, is of a super high quality, which you really can’t say for a lot of other types of cancer.

So I tell patients that their fears that they have are absolutely justified. And one thing we teach the fellows, the residents and the medical students, is that you validate those concerns and you listen to those concerns and you don’t ignore it or blow through it. That you absolutely…those are the most important parts of that conversation. And if you don’t validate it, the patient says, “Well, I have a fear of randomization.” And you go, “Hmm, there’s no such thing.” Then that’s not validating. And that’s not even listening. That’s just moving on because you don’t have that concern, but you’re not bringing that, you’re not validating the patient’s concern. And so you have to be very, very careful in doing that because there are multiple studies that have shown those are the big concerns.

Also, bringing up the things that are facilitators for clinical trials, that if there is an opportunity for reimbursement for travel or reimbursement for hotel stays or reimbursement that we say that this trial has a reimbursement program, or if we say that use other things that help facilitate clinical trials like speaking to the family, not just speaking to a patient, but speaking to the caregiver and speaking to the extended family that that patient will have a conversation with are really important conversation because the more people that you can talk to, that’s part of that patient’s decision-making group, which can be very different from patient to patient based on their culture, the more likely you are to get a consensus among that decision-making group for the patient to go on a clinical trial.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Those are great tips. Thank you both so much. It’s time to wrap up our roundtable. I must say I have truly enjoyed this conversation as always. I have learned a lot. I’m sure that our audience has learned a lot. In closing, I’m going to go to each of you just to share maybe one takeaway that you’d like to leave with the audience. So I’ll start with you Dr. Cole, one takeaway.

Dr. Craig Cole: 

One takeaway. I actually thought about this, but I think that the biggest takeaway is, if I can squeeze two in.

Is that, is to remember that basically they’re all patients want to be involved in clinical trials and the ownership of having patients on clinical trials is really on us to really talk to them over a longitudinal period, to talk about clinical trials, to have them involved. To not look at a patient saying, “No, they don’t want to be on clinical trial.” That you really engage that patient to tell them about really the incredible progress that we’ve made, how competitive clinical trials are and how exciting it is to be part of that research environment. And that would be my one, my two sort of closing thoughts.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you. And what about you, Ms. Gleason?

Charise Gleason:

Dr. Cole said it well. Please discuss this with your patient. Listen to them. Listen to their concerns. Don’t make decisions for them based on bias that maybe you’re bringing in. Don’t make decisions based on maybe it’s too far. Patients drive hours to go on clinical trials, and let’s give them the information and have that conversation.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Wonderful. Well, thanks again to both of you, and thank you all for tuning in to this Empowering Providers to Empower Patients program. I’m Dr. Nicole Rochester. Have an amazing day.


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