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Launching Co-Managed APP/MD Clinics for Bladder Cancer with Dr. Amy Luckenbaugh, Meredith Donahue NP, Dr. Bogdana Schmidt on the BackTable Urology Podcast
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BackTable Urology

Episode # 306  •  04 Jun 2026

Launching Co-Managed APP/MD Clinics for Bladder Cancer

Are traditional bladder cancer care models falling behind as new therapies flood the field and reshape the landscape? In this episode of BackTable Urology, Dr. Bogdana Schmidt talks with Dr. Amy Luckenbaugh and DNP/APP Meredith Donahue about building a co-managed intravesical therapy clinic that rethinks care for patients with non–muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). With innovative agents increasing patient volume and complexity, the team discusses adapting care models to new realities.

This podcast is supported by an educational grant from Johnson & Johnson.

Timestamps

00:00 - Why Clinic Models Need to Change Now
04:03 - Overcoming Financial and J-Code Hurdles
11:04 - High Volume Workflow
14:10 - Pharmacy Coordination And Timing
19:02 - Proactive Lower Urinary Tract SYmptom Management
22:25 - Handling Difficult Catheters
32:08 - Defining Clinic Success

Resources

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More about this episode

The conversation covers prioritizing clinical trials, managing operational challenges such as prior authorizations and billing hurdles, and the importance of pharmacy coordination and predictable clinic workflows. Donahue describes a high-efficiency installation day model managing up to 50 patients a week with specialized staff, real-time decisions, and tailored logistics for therapies like Adstiladrin. They also discuss symptom prevention, patient triage, and clinic success measures including therapy availability, patient satisfaction, and opportunities to preserve bladder function.

The Materials available on BackTable are provided for informational and educational purposes only and are not a substitute for the independent professional judgment of a qualified healthcare professional in diagnosing or treating patients. Any opinions, statements, or views expressed are those of the individual contributors and do not necessarily reflect those of the publisher, platform, or any affiliated organization.

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