Data-Driven Defragmentation: Achieving Value-Based Sarcoma and Rare Cancer Care Through Integrated Care Pathway Mapping.

Journal: Journal of personalized medicine
Published Date:

Abstract

Sarcomas, a rare and complex group of cancers, require multidisciplinary care across multiple healthcare settings, often leading to delays, redundant testing, and fragmented data. This fragmented care landscape obstructs the implementation of Value-Based Healthcare (VBHC), where care efficiency is tied to measurable patient outcomes.ShapeHub, an interoperable digital platform, aims to streamline sarcoma care by centralizing patient data across providers, akin to a logistics system tracking an item through each stage of delivery. ShapeHub integrates diagnostics, treatment records, and specialist consultations into a unified dataset accessible to all care providers, enabling timely decision-making and reducing diagnostic delays. In a case study within the Swiss Sarcoma Network, ShapeHub has shown substantial impact, improving diagnostic pathways, reducing unplanned surgeries, and optimizing radiotherapy protocols. Through AI-driven natural language processing, Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources, and Health Information Exchanges, HIEs, the platform transforms unstructured records into real-time, actionable insights, enhancing multidisciplinary collaboration and clinical outcomes. By identifying redundancies, ShapeHub also contributes to cost efficiency, benchmarking treatment costs across institutions and optimizing care pathways. This data-driven approach creates a foundation for precision medicine applications, including digital twin technology, to predict treatment responses and personalize care plans. ShapeHub offers a scalable model for managing rare cancers and complex diseases, harmonizing care pathways, improving precision oncology, and transforming VBHC into a reality. This article outlines the potential of ShapeHub to overcome fragmented data barriers and improve patient-centered care.

Authors

  • Bruno Fuchs
    Sarcoma Center, Department of Orthopaedics and Trauma, LUKS University Hospital, 6000 Lucerne, Switzerland.
  • Philip Heesen
    Faculty of Medicine, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.

Keywords

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