Williams Randi M, Whealan Julia, Taylor Kathryn L, Adams-Campbell Lucile, Miller Kristen E, Foley Kristie, Luta George, Brandt Heather, Glassmeyer Katharine, Sangraula Anu, Yee Peyton, Camidge Kaylin, Blumenthal Joseph, Modi Saumil, Kratz Heather
Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, Cancer Prevention and Control Program, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA.
MedStar Health Research Institute, Washington, DC, USA.
Implement Sci Commun. 2024 Feb 16;5(1):15. doi: 10.1186/s43058-024-00553-4.
Low-dose computed tomography (lung cancer screening) can reduce lung cancer-specific mortality by 20-24%. Based on this evidence, the United States Preventive Services Task Force recommends annual lung cancer screening for asymptomatic high-risk individuals. Despite this recommendation, utilization is low (3-20%). Lung cancer screening may be particularly beneficial for African American patients because they are more likely to have advanced disease, lower survival, and lower screening rates compared to White individuals. Evidence points to multilevel approaches that simultaneously address multiple determinants to increase screening rates and decrease lung cancer burden in minoritized populations. This study will test the effects of provider- and patient-level strategies for promoting equitable lung cancer screening utilization.
Guided by the Health Disparities Research Framework and the Practical, Robust Implementation and Sustainability Model, we will conduct a quasi-experimental study with four primary care clinics within a large health system (MedStar Health). Individuals eligible for lung cancer screening, defined as 50-80 years old, ≥ 20 pack-years, currently smoking, or quit < 15 years, no history of lung cancer, who have an appointment scheduled with their provider, and who are non-adherent to screening will be identified via the EHR, contacted, and enrolled (N = 184 for implementation clinics, N = 184 for comparison clinics; total N = 368). Provider participants will include those practicing at the partner clinics (N = 26). To increase provider-prompted discussions about lung screening, an electronic health record (EHR) clinician reminder will be sent to providers prior to scheduled visits with the screening-eligible participants. To increase patient-level knowledge and patient activation about screening, an inreach specialist will conduct a pre-visit phone-based educational session with participants. Patient participants will be assessed at baseline and 1-week post-visit to measure provider-patient discussion, screening intentions, and knowledge. Screening referrals and screening completion rates will be assessed via the EHR at 6 months. We will use mixed methods and multilevel assessments of patients and providers to evaluate the implementation outcomes (adoption, feasibility, acceptability, and fidelity).
The study will inform future work designed to measure the independent and overlapping contributions of the multilevel implementation strategies to advance equity in lung screening rates.
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04675476. Registered December 19, 2020.
低剂量计算机断层扫描(肺癌筛查)可将肺癌特异性死亡率降低20%-24%。基于这一证据,美国预防服务工作组建议对无症状的高危个体进行年度肺癌筛查。尽管有这一建议,但筛查的利用率较低(3%-20%)。肺癌筛查对非裔美国患者可能特别有益,因为与白人相比,他们更有可能患有晚期疾病、生存率较低且筛查率较低。有证据表明,采用多层次方法同时解决多个决定因素,可提高少数族裔人群的筛查率并减轻肺癌负担。本研究将测试针对医疗服务提供者和患者层面的策略对促进公平的肺癌筛查利用率的效果。
以健康差异研究框架和实用、稳健实施与可持续性模型为指导,我们将在一个大型医疗系统(MedStar Health)内的四家初级保健诊所开展一项准实验研究。符合肺癌筛查条件的个体定义为年龄在50-80岁之间、吸烟史≥20包年、目前仍在吸烟或戒烟时间<15年、无肺癌病史、已预约与医疗服务提供者就诊且未坚持进行筛查的患者,将通过电子健康记录(EHR)进行识别、联系并纳入研究(实施诊所N = 184,对照诊所N = 184;总N = 368)。医疗服务提供者参与者将包括在合作诊所执业的人员(N = 26)。为了增加医疗服务提供者发起的关于肺部筛查的讨论,将在符合筛查条件的参与者预约就诊前,向医疗服务提供者发送电子健康记录临床提醒。为了增加患者层面关于筛查的知识和患者参与度,一名 outreach 专家将与参与者进行一次就诊前的电话教育课程。患者参与者将在基线和就诊后1周接受评估,以衡量医疗服务提供者与患者的讨论、筛查意愿和知识水平。将在6个月时通过电子健康记录评估筛查转诊和筛查完成率。我们将使用混合方法以及对患者和医疗服务提供者的多层次评估来评估实施结果(采用情况、可行性、可接受性和保真度)。
该研究将为未来旨在衡量多层次实施策略对提高肺癌筛查率公平性的独立和重叠贡献的工作提供信息。
ClinicalTrials.gov,NCT04675476。2020年12月19日注册。