Leading Cancer Clinic in Taiwan Replaces Paper Charts with An All-Electronic Clinical Process And Enhanced Patient Safety Features

On July 12, 2015 Varian Medical Systems reported the Koo Foundation Sun Yat-Sen Cancer Center (KF-SYSCC) has established an entirely paperless and filmless clinical process in radiation oncology, designed to enhance patient safety as well as operational efficiency (Press release, InfiMed, JUL 12, 2015, View Source [SID:1234506321]). Using the ARIA oncology information system from Varian Medical Systems (NYSE: VAR), the clinical team has automated essential tasks, built in safety-checks, and centralized patient information for easier access by staff members.

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ARIA combines a comprehensive, oncology-specific patient electronic medical record (EMR) with numerous tools for managing clinical, administrative and financial operations in multidisciplinary cancer care settings.

"We were using both Varian and Siemens information management software, but we standardized on Varian’s ARIA platform. Within three months we had removed all paper charts from the department," said Yeh-Chi Lo, Ph.D., chief of the Department of Medical Physics. "Varian and its local agent, Cooperative C.L. Enterprise Co., provided us with valuable assistance, helping us to configure the ARIA software to manage different types of treatment, and to reflect our preferences in terms of clinical work flow. The software is set up to interrupt the clinical workflow at critical junctures unless specific safety checks have been completed and documented."

"Conversion to an electronic process actually made our workflow more efficient, and potentially safer due to careful automation of essential steps," added Skye Hung-Chun Cheng M.D., chief of the Department of Radiation Oncology. "Our goal was to become a fully paperless and filmless department. ARIA has also enhanced the communication between our clinical team members."

The KF-SYSCC Radiation Therapy Department is a mixed-vendor environment, treating patients on three Varian linear accelerators including a TrueBeam system plus a Primus-M machine from Siemens.

Seven radiation oncologists working with nine medical physicists at the cancer center offer patients a broad range of advanced treatments, including intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT), RapidArc radiotherapy, stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), and stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). Clinicians use respiratory gating to compensate for breathing motion during treatments for lung or breast cancer.

The cancer center also manages high-dose-rate brachytherapy and seed implant procedures using the ARIA platform, resulting in one comprehensive database of patient information that can be mined for insights about trends and outcomes.

"The future of health care will center on the use of evidence-based protocols within a pay-for-performance framework," said Dr. Cheng. "Realizing that vision will rely on our ability to mine our clinical data–something that would not be feasible without a comprehensive EMR like ARIA."

"The Radiation Therapy Department of the Koo Foundation Sun Yat-Sen Cancer Center is the first department in Taiwan to use ARIA to establish a fully paperless clinical environment," said Zhang Xiao, Varian’s vice president and managing director of the greater China region. "Varian commends the clinical and management teams for being forward-looking thought leaders in the use of digital technology to improve the quality of cancer care."