Interactive Transcript
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Okay, tips for implementation and
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we're very getting towards the end.
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So important.
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This was an issue.
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There is no billing code
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So we needed to create a self-pay and we had
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to work very carefully with legal because
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the patients have to sign an awareness that
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they have to pay out of pocket for this.
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So that's very, very important.
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And that took a long time
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actually at our institution.
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Again, I emphasize this before working with
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your techs on scan efficiency, do those recons.
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After the patient's off the table, so you can
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get the next patient and turn it over quickly
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work with scheduling to triage the patient.
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So they get to the appropriate protocol.
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That's very, very important.
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Do they actually qualify for
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a full protocol based on risk?
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I'm sure you may have heard that there's a lot
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of legislation going on to allow more women
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with dense breasts, particularly extremely
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dense breasts to have insurance coverage for.
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Uh, full protocol M.
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R.
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Um, that's happening across the country.
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It's happening pretty quickly in Pennsylvania.
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So we're going to have to be very
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careful in our triaging of patients.
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Um, recommend risk assessment
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at the time of screening.
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So you get women into the right protocol.
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The full versus the abbreviated, and we really
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ask these patients to bring prior mammograms.
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If they're out of our network, and we
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don't have their mammograms because it
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does help to correlate the mammogram with
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the interpretation of any breast MRI.
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Here's an interesting paper that came out
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fairly recently about how much are women.
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willing to pay for breast MRI.
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And again, this was a single institution
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survey done in 2019 to 2020, um, asking about
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both, um, contrast-enhanced mammo and MRI and
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how much they'd be willing to pay for these
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contrasts, these, um, you know, dynamic studies.
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Um, they had a pretty good completion rate and
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53% of the women who completed this had
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dense breasts and a good group of them,
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almost 14% had had a prior contrast study.
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Um, 35% were satisfied
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with mammography for screening and the major
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negative or neutral part about these extra
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studies were contrast, claustrophobia, false
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positives, of course, you know, extra exposure
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with the contrast-enhanced mammo, not with the
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MRI, of course, and having an IV, et cetera.
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So, things to think about, but the majority
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just over, um, about 55 percent were willing
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to pay at least 250 to 500 dollars out
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of pocket for MRI when they did not meet
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the criteria for insurance reimbursement.
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I will tell you that our site.
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We looked at reimbursement for or average
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out of pocket payment for full, uh, M.
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R.
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as well as supplemental screening
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with ultrasound, et cetera.
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And in general, things were around
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300 or a little bit over 300, 325.
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So we went low and I was very lucky
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to have a collaborative chair.
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We charged 299 out of pocket.
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Um, at our site for our abbreviated protocol.
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I'm not sure that makes us any money, but, um,
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it does get a lot of abbreviated MRIs performed.
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These are questions.
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It's scheduling.
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You might be interested in and these
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are things are we've worked with our
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schedulers to try to triage patients to
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the right, um, study, you know, they may,
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uh, really be eligible for a full protocol.
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Um, they may not want to pay out of pocket.
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We do right now have a grant
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for, um, African American women
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91 00:03:37,730 --> 00:03:40,079 to get abbreviated MRIs for free.
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That's because we were finding
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there were access issues.
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Um, and that's an ongoing project.
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But anyway, um, making sure that they
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have dense breasts, um, et cetera, just
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questions that you may be interested for
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your reference and we made this card.
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Um, we've had different variations of
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this card, but this is an information
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card that we put in primary care
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offices, referring physicians' offices.
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We have them in our waiting room in our mammo
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suite so that if women want to ask questions
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and want to read about this, and then if we meet
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a woman for a diagnostic or for screen, and we
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really think she would benefit from this, we hand
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her this card and it tells you how to schedule.
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Um, and answer some of the very typical questions.
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And we worked with, um, you know,
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our, our department and advertising
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for this just some numbers over time.
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You can see we started in
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January 2016 on the left.
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I have by month.
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You can see the dip there, um, right here.
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This is COVID.
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Nothing was happening for those 2 months.
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Unfortunately.
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Um, and then we started back up and here we are.
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Through May 2023 on the right is
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the studies by year again, went down
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a little bit during COVID years.
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Um, so you can see, we do a pretty brisk
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volume, um, of these in our network.
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So in summary, um, I think, I hope I've
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demonstrated to you that, uh,
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MR breast MR is the most sensitive, most
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modality for the detection of breast cancer.
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And I really believe that abbreviated
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protocols have a very similar
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sensitivity to the full protocols.
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And I think there may be an improvement in
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specificity, but we need to get more data on that.
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But I, I think I actually may be there.
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So abbreviated MR breast MRIs have improved
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efficiency and maintain accuracy
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and therefore may allow more women access.
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And I think that is so important.
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I think this is going to be the supplemental
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screening modality of the future.
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I do think you still need the mammogram to know,
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and preferably a tomosynthesis to go with it.
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