e13538 Background: The Exercise in Cancer Decision Support (EXCEEDS) algorithm is an evidence-based, risk stratified framework. This framework allows for enhanced decision making for exercise pre-participation medical clearance and triage to cancer rehabilitation or exercise services across the cancer continuum. We conducted a Delphi study to examine utility and acceptability of the EXCEEDS algorithm for oncology stakeholders. Methods: Delphi study participants were randomized to two case studies, then made pre-participation medical clearance (yes/no) and intervention triage recommendations (cancer rehabilitation, clinically-supervised exercise, cancer-specific community-based exercise, and unsupervised exercise) in two conditions: independent (IND) and using EXCEEDS. Immediately following, participants rated algorithm acceptability in four domains using 4-point Likert scales (1- strongly disagree, to 4- strongly agree). We dichotomously coded accuracy (correct/incorrect) for each medical clearance and triage recommendation, then calculated the proportion of correct answers for each case to determine accuracy. We compared triage decision time (seconds) between conditions (IND vs. EXCEEDS) using paired-samples t-tests. We calculated the proportion of participants who ‘agreed’ (i.e., score ≥3) with each acceptability domain. Results: Oncology stakeholders (N=33) were mostly female (69.7%), 35-44 years old (42.4%), located in the United States (60.6%), and had at least 10 years of experience (60.6%). When using EXCEEDS, accuracy for medical clearance decisions improved in 3 of 4 cases (75%), triage decision accuracy improved in 4 of 4 (100%) cases, and triage time (seconds) improved significantly in 3 of 4 cases (75%, p<.05). Table shows average improvement in decision accuracy and triage time for each case study. Most participants agreed that the algorithm was acceptable in each domain: “meets my approval” (n=21, 63.6%), “is appealing” (n=29, 87.9%), “enjoyable to use” (n=19, 57.6%), and “welcomed in my discipline or practice” (n=24, 72.7%). Conclusions: Accuracy and efficiency of decision-making for medical clearance and triage to cancer rehabilitation or exercise services was enhanced when using the EXEECDS algorithm. Most participants agreed the algorithm was acceptable. Future research is needed to validate the tool and explore avenues for dissemination and clinical implementation. % difference between EXCEEDS and Individual condition (EXCEEDS – IND) for medical clearance decision, triage decision and mean (M) and standard deviation (SD) of triage decision time.[Table: see text]