| Literature DB >> 29197371 |
Susan Eggly1, Lauren M Hamel2, Elisabeth Heath1, Mark A Manning1, Terrance L Albrecht1, Ellen Barton3, Mark Wojda1, Tanina Foster1, Michael Carducci4, Dina Lansey5, Ting Wang5, Rehab Abdallah5, Narineh Abrahamian5, Seongho Kim1, Nicole Senft1, Louis A Penner1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cancer clinical trials are essential for testing new treatments and represent state-of-the-art cancer treatment, but only a small percentage of patients ever enroll in a trial. Under-enrollment is an even greater problem among minorities, particularly African Americans, representing a racial/ethnic disparity in cancer care. One understudied cause is patient-physician communication, which is often of poor quality during clinical interactions between African-American patients and non-African-American physicians. Partnering Around Cancer Clinical Trials (PACCT) involves a transdisciplinary theoretical model proposing that patient and physician individual attitudes and beliefs and their interpersonal communication during racially discordant clinical interactions influence outcomes related to patients' decisions to participate in a trial. The overall goal of the study is to test a multilevel intervention designed to increase rates at which African-American and White men with prostate cancer make an informed decision to participate in a clinical trial. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Clinical trials; Health disparities; Patient-physician communication; Prostate cancer
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29197371 PMCID: PMC5712160 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-017-3804-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Conceptual Model
Study measures
| Time 0 | Time 1 | Time 2: Clinic Visit | Time 3: Follow-up interview | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient measures | ||||
| Socio-demographics (e.g, age, race/ethnicity, education, income) | X | |||
| Date of prostate cancer diagnosis | X | |||
| Economic burden [ | X | |||
| Health status [ | X | X | ||
| Health literacy [ | X | |||
| Trust in the medical profession [ | X | X | ||
| Group-based medical mistrust [ | X | |||
| Receptivity to discussing a clinical trial [ | X | |||
| Decisional control preferences [ | X | |||
| Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale [ | X | |||
| Self-efficacy with discussing trials | X | |||
| Positive and Negative Affect Scale (PANAS) [ | X | X | ||
| Attitudes toward clinical trials | X | |||
| Trust in a physician [ | X | |||
| Perceived racial/ethnic discrimination [ | X | |||
| Religiosity [ | X | |||
| Spirituality [ | X | |||
| Social support [ | X | |||
| Decisional control perceptions [ | X | |||
| Perceived physician patient-centeredness [ | X | |||
| Perceived active participation in the interaction [ | X | |||
| Perceived physician patient-centered communication [ | X | |||
| Presence of a trial discussion/offer | X | |||
| Decision about participating in trial offered | X | |||
| Understanding of trial offered [ | X | |||
| Perceptions of team [ | X | |||
| Satisfaction with intervention (intervention arm only) [ | X | |||
| Open-ended questions regarding trial offered | X | |||
| Physician Measures | ||||
| Socio demographic/professional characteristics (e.g., age, race/ethnicity, years in practice) | X | |||
| Attitudes toward clinical trials [ | X | |||
| Attitudes toward offering a clinical trial | X | |||
| Decisional control preferences [ | X | |||
| Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale [ | X | |||
| Racial attitudes/symbolic racism [ | X | |||
| Implicit racial attitudes [ | X | |||
| Perceptions of patient [ | X | |||
| Presence of a trial discussion/offer | X | |||
| Decisional control perceptions [ | X | |||
| Observer Ratings of Video Recorded Interactions | ||||
| Presence and quality of clinical trial discussion [ | X | |||
| Physician patient-centered communication [ | X | |||
| Patient active participation in interaction [ | X | |||
Fig. 2Flow Diagram of Patient Enrollment, Randomization, and Procedures