Reuland Daniel S, Brenner Alison T, Hoffman Richard, McWilliams Andrew, Rhyne Robert L, Getrich Christina, Tapp Hazel, Weaver Mark A, Callan Danelle, Cubillos Laura, Urquieta de Hernandez Brisa, Pignone Michael P
Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill2Division of General Medicine & Clinical Epidemiology, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill3Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Department of Medicine, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City5University of Iowa Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Iowa, Iowa City6Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque.
JAMA Intern Med. 2017 Jul 1;177(7):967-974. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.1294.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) screening is underused, especially among vulnerable populations. Decision aids and patient navigation are potentially complementary interventions for improving CRC screening rates, but their combined effect on screening completion is unknown.
To determine the combined effect of a CRC screening decision aid and patient navigation compared with usual care on CRC screening completion.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: In this randomized clinical trial, data were collected from January 2014 to March 2016 at 2 community health center practices, 1 in North Carolina and 1 in New Mexico, serving vulnerable populations. Patients ages 50 to 75 years who had average CRC risk, spoke English or Spanish, were not current with recommended CRC screening, and were attending primary care visits were recruited and randomized 1:1 to intervention or control arms.
Intervention participants viewed a CRC screening decision aid in English or Spanish immediately before their clinician encounter. The decision aid promoted screening and presented colonoscopy and fecal occult blood testing as screening options. After the clinician encounter, intervention patients received support for screening completion from a bilingual patient navigator. Control participants viewed a food safety video before the encounter and otherwise received usual care.
The primary outcome was CRC screening completion within 6 months of the index study visit assessed by blinded medical record review.
Characteristics of the 265 participants were as follows: their mean age was 58 years; 173 (65%) were female, 164 (62%) were Latino; 40 (15%) were white non-Latino; 61 (23%) were black or of mixed race; 191 (78%) had a household income of less than $20 000; 101 (38%) had low literacy; 75 (28%) were on Medicaid; and 91 (34%) were uninsured. Intervention participants were more likely to complete CRC screening within 6 months (68% vs 27%); adjusted-difference, 40 percentage points (95% CI, 29-51 percentage points). The intervention was more effective in women than in men (50 vs 21 percentage point increase, interaction P = .02). No effect modification was observed across other subgroups.
A patient decision aid plus patient navigation increased the rate of CRC screening completion in compared with usual care invulnerable primary care patients.
clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT02054598.
结直肠癌(CRC)筛查未得到充分利用,尤其是在弱势群体中。决策辅助工具和患者导航可能是提高CRC筛查率的互补性干预措施,但它们对筛查完成率的综合影响尚不清楚。
确定CRC筛查决策辅助工具和患者导航与常规护理相比对CRC筛查完成情况的综合影响。
设计、设置和参与者:在这项随机临床试验中,于2014年1月至2016年3月在北卡罗来纳州和新墨西哥州的2个社区卫生中心收集数据,这些中心服务于弱势群体。招募年龄在50至75岁之间、平均CRC风险、讲英语或西班牙语、未进行推荐的CRC筛查且正在接受初级保健就诊的患者,并按1:1随机分为干预组或对照组。
干预组参与者在与临床医生会面之前立即观看英语或西班牙语的CRC筛查决策辅助工具。该决策辅助工具促进筛查,并将结肠镜检查和粪便潜血试验作为筛查选项。在与临床医生会面后,干预组患者从双语患者导航员那里获得完成筛查的支持。对照组参与者在会面之前观看食品安全视频,其他方面接受常规护理。
主要结局是通过盲态病历审查评估在索引研究就诊后6个月内完成CRC筛查。
265名参与者的特征如下:他们的平均年龄为58岁;173名(65%)为女性,164名(62%)为拉丁裔;40名(15%)为非拉丁裔白人;61名(23%)为黑人或混血;191名(78%)家庭收入低于20,000美元;101名(38%)识字水平低;75名(28%)参加医疗补助;91名(34%)未参保。干预组参与者在6个月内更有可能完成CRC筛查(68%对27%);调整差异为40个百分点(95%CI,29 - 51个百分点)。该干预措施对女性比对男性更有效(增加50个百分点对21个百分点,交互作用P = 0.02)。在其他亚组中未观察到效应修饰。
与常规护理相比,患者决策辅助工具加患者导航提高了弱势群体初级保健患者的CRC筛查完成率。
clinicaltrials.gov标识符:NCT02054598。