| Literature DB >> 29692980 |
Charles A Kunos1, Holly A Massett1, Annette Galassi2, Joan L Walker3, Marge J Good4, Luis Báez Díaz5, Worta McCaskill-Stevens4.
Abstract
Women in the U.S. Commonwealth of Puerto Rico (PR) have a higher age-adjusted incidence rate for uterine cervix cancer than the U.S. mainland as well as substantial access and economic barriers to cancer care. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) funds a Minority/Underserved NCI Community Oncology Research Program in PR (PRNCORP) as part of a national network of community-based health-care systems to conduct multisite cancer clinical trials in diverse populations. Participation by the PRNCORP in NCI's uterine cervix cancer clinical trials, however, has remained limited. This study reports on the findings of an NCI site visit in PR to assess barriers impeding site activation and accrual to its sponsored gynecologic cancer clinical trials. Qualitative, semi-structured individual, and group interviews were conducted at six PRNCORP-affiliated locations to ascertain: long-term trial accrual objectives; key stakeholders in PR that address uterine cervix cancer care; key challenges or barriers to activating and to enrolling patients in NCI uterine cervix cancer treatment trials; and resources, policies, or procedures in place or needed on the island to support NCI-sponsored clinical trials. An NCI-sponsored uterine cervix cancer radiation-chemotherapy intervention clinical trial (NCT02466971), already activated on the island, served as a test case to identify relevant patient accrual and site barriers. The site visit identified five key barriers to accrual: (1) lack of central personnel to coordinate referrals for treatment plans, medical tests, and medical imaging across the island's clinical trial access points; (2) patient insurance coverage; (3) lack of a coordinated brachytherapy schedule at San Juan-centric service providers; (4) limited credentialed radiotherapy machines island-wide; and (5) too few radiology medical physicists tasked to credential trial-specified positron emission tomography scanners island-wide. PR offers a unique opportunity to study overarching and tactical strategies for improving accrual to NCI-sponsored gynecologic cancer clinical trials. Interview findings support adding and re-tasking personnel for coordinated trial-eligible patient referral, accrual, and treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Puerto Rico; accrual; barriers to participation; cervical cancer; radiotherapy; uterine cervix cancer
Year: 2018 PMID: 29692980 PMCID: PMC5902541 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Puerto Rico NCI Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP) components in 2017.
Figure 2Diagram of referral coordination for women with gynecologic cancers in Puerto Rico (PR) in 2017. (A) Individual gynecologic cancer patient referrals pass through the PR Minority Underserved NCORP gynecologic medical oncologist to the CRAs in 2017. (B) Under a pilot study, a full-time effort gynecologic research nurse will provide a “go-to” trial champion and coordinate cancer care among the indicated providers. Abbreviations: NCORP, NCI Community Oncology Research Program; CRA, clinical research associate.