| Literature DB >> 30464417 |
Samuel J Lee1, Meghan C O'Leary1, Karl E Umble1, Stephanie B Wheeler1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient preferences are important to consider in the decision-making process for colorectal cancer (CRC) screening. Vulnerable populations, such as racial/ethnic minorities and low-income, veteran, and rural populations, exhibit lower screening uptake. This systematic review summarizes the existing literature on vulnerable patient populations' preferences regarding CRC screening.Entities:
Keywords: colorectal cancer screening; patient preference; systematic review; vulnerable populations
Year: 2018 PMID: 30464417 PMCID: PMC6216965 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S156552
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Inclusion/exclusion criteria
| Criterion | Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Vulnerable patient populations | All other non-vulnerable patient populations |
| Comparison | Modalities of CRC screening as well as screening program delivery features and other attributes | All other comparisons |
| Outcome | Patient-level CRC screening preferences related to test modalities, test features, incentives, screening program design, service delivery, source of information, communication method | All other outcomes |
| Time | Articles published from January 1, 1996 to December 31, 2017 | Articles published outside of this time period |
| Setting | All developed country settings (including international studies) | Developing countries |
| Study design | Quantitative (including discrete choice experiments/conjoint analyses), qualitative, and mixed-methods | Literature reviews, systematic reviews |
Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram.
Characteristics of studies with racial/ethnic minorities
| Study | Objective | Vulnerable population | Study design | Total sample size | Size of vulnerable population | Outcome measured | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abola et al (2015) | To assess patients’ perceptions of the sDNA test and if perceptions vary by race | African Americans | Survey | 423 | 127 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or sDNA); test attribute preferences | Both African Americans and whites preferred sDNA. More African Americans than whites preferred a colonoscopy. African Americans perceived sDNA to be more accurate but were more embarrassed by it |
| Brenner et al (2016) | To test the effect of a CRC screening decision aid on screening-related communication and decision-making within primary care | Hispanics/Latinos & African Americans | RCT | 262 | 204 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or FOBT/FIT) | Preference for FOBT/FIT over colonoscopy among both the intervention (67.1% vs 26.0%) and control (45.8% vs 22.2%) groups, with the intervention arm more likely to state a preference than the control arm (93.1% vs 68.0%) |
| Calderwood et al (2011) | To assess patient preferences for CRC screening modalities using a decision aid within primary care | African Americans | Survey | 100 | 73 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, FOBT, sDNA, or CTC) | Race was not associated with test preference. Among the total study population, 59% preferred colonoscopy, 17% preferred FOBT, 14% preferred sDNA, and 10% preferred CTC |
| Chablani et al (2017) | To assess patient preferences for CRC screening modality, identify the test attributes that influence preferences, assess the strength of preferences, and determine if preference varies by patient characteristics | Hispanics/Latinos & African Americans | Survey | 90 | 90 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, FIT, CTC, or Cologuard) | Colonoscopy (64.4%) and Cologuard (31.1%) preferred over CTC (2.2%) and FIT (2.2%). The most common reason for preference for colonoscopy was its accuracy for detecting CRC, while the lack of preparation needed was the most common reason for Cologuard preference |
| Debourcy et al (2008) | To determine CRC test preference after reviewing a written presentation of CRC screening modalities and potential differences by participant characteristics | Non-white | Survey | 323 | 154 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or FOBT) | Minority race/ethnicity was associated with a preference for FOBT over colonoscopy. In multivariate analysis, the preference for FOBT over colonoscopy was greater among Latinos than non-Latino whites |
| Ellison et al (2011) | To identify preferred sources of information about CRC screening | Hispanic/Latinos | Survey | 395 | 395 | Preference for source of information | Top four preferred sources of information: doctor/provider (99%), health brochures (84%), television (80%), and someone who speaks the same language (80%) |
| Greiner et al (2005) | To explore CRC screening knowledge, attitudes, barriers, and preferences in order to develop culturally appropriate interventions | African Americans | Focus groups | 55 | 55 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, or FOBT) | Following an educational lecture, 33% of the participants preferred colonoscopy and 26% preferred FOBT. The rest would follow their doctors’ recommendation |
| Harden et al (2011) | To explore knowledge, beliefs, and attitudes about CRC screening, particularly FIT, in order to design an FIT screening intervention | African Americans | Focus groups | 28 | 28 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, FIT, or FOBT) | FIT was preferred over colonoscopy and FOBT. Compared to FOBT, FIT was preferred because it requires no food restrictions |
| Hawley et al (2012) | To examine associations between psychosocial variables and CRC test preference, and to assess the concordance between the type of test preferred and completed | Hispanics/Latinos & African Americans | Randomized experiment | 1,224 | 796 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, FOBT, sigmoidoscopy, or barium enema) | Race was not associated with test preference. Among the total study population, 41.1% preferred colonoscopy, 34.7% preferred FOBT, 12.7% preferred sigmoidoscopy, 5.7% preferred barium enema, and 5.8% did not report a preference |
| Hawley et al (2008) | To describe variation in CRC screening preferences within primary care | Hispanics/Latinos & African Americans | Conjoint analysis | 212 | 138 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, FOBT, sigmoidoscopy, barium enema, FIT, or virtual colonoscopy); test attribute preferences | Hispanics were more likely to prefer FOBT and barium enema, whereas African Americans were more likely to prefer sigmoidoscopy and virtual colonoscopy, as compared to whites. All racial/ethnic groups rated accuracy as the most important CRC testing attribute. More African Americans rated the frequency of the test as important compared to other groups |
| Jo et al (2008) | To understand predictors, facilitators, barriers, and intervention preferences regarding CRC screening in order to inform future interventions | Korean Americans | Interviews | 151 | 151 | Preference for source of information | An educational seminar (42%) was the most preferred source of information, followed by the Korean media (30%) and print materials (20%) |
| Martens et al (2016) | To understand screening program characteristics and preferences and to assess CRC screening barriers and facilitators | Hispanics/Latinos | DCE | 38 | 38 | Preference for screening program design/delivery, including screening modality options, travel time, money paid for screening, and the portion of the cost of follow-up care paid out of pocket | Being given a choice between two or three CRC screening tests was preferred over either colonoscopy or the stool test alone. Costs of the screening test and follow-up care were more important than having testing modality options or travel time |
| Messina et al (2005) | To assess consistency between patient preferences for participation in screening decisions and their usual decision-making practices and potential differences by participant characteristics | African Americans | Survey | 2,119 | 122 | Decision-making preferences | Being African American vs white was associated with a greater likelihood of a preference for shared decision-making with the provider vs making all decisions independently |
| Molokwu et al (2017) | To describe general decision-making preferences | Hispanics/Latinos | Survey | 780 | 780 | Decision-making preferences | A collaborative decision-making role (53.3%), compared to a passive (26.4%) or active role (20.3%), was preferred by the majority of the study population |
| Myers et al (2008) | To determine the impact of tailored navigation on CRC screening within primary care | Non-white | Survey | 154 | 29 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or FOBT) | Race was not associated with test preference. Among the total study population, colonoscopy was preferred over FOBT |
| Palmer et al (2010) | To understand the influence of test attributes on CRC screening modality preferences | African Americans | Interviews | 60 | 60 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, FOBT, or barium enema); test attribute preferences | Colonoscopy (57%) preferred over FOBT (43%), with no participants preferring barium enema or sigmoidoscopy. The preferred attributes of colonoscopy included its thoroughness and accuracy, whereas the preferred attributes of FOBT included the ease of the test and its non-invasiveness |
| Ruffin et al (2009) | To assess the most and least preferred CRC screening tests by participant characteristics in order to develop a web-based decision-making tool | African Americans | Survey + focus groups | 93 | 51 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, FOBT, or DCBE) | More whites than African Americans preferred FOBT, whereas more African Americans than whites preferred colonoscopy. Among African Americans, the most preferred test was colonoscopy, and the least preferred was DCBE |
| Schroy et al (2011) | To assess the effectiveness of a decision aid on shared decision-making within primary care | African Americans | RCT | 666 | 418 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, FOBT, sigmoidoscopy + FOBT, DCBE, or no preference) | Race was not associated with test preference for colonoscopy vs FOBT. Among the total study population, colonoscopy was preferred (59%), followed by FOBT (26%) |
| Schroy and Heeren (2005) | To compare patient perceptions of CRC screening tests and elicit preferences | Non-white | Survey | 3,359 | 358 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, FOBT, or sDNA) | sDNA preferred (42.5%) over FOBT (30.5%) or colonoscopy (27.0%) among the non-white population |
| Schroy et al (2007) | To assess patient preferences given media attention about colonoscopy and the introduction of sDNA testing | African Americans | Survey | 263 | 92 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, FOBT, sigmoidoscopy, FOBT + sigmoidoscopy, DCBE, or sDNA); test attribute preferences | African Americans were more likely to prefer colonoscopy and value test accuracy |
| Sheikh et al (2004) | To identify patient attitudes and beliefs about screening tests and assess the potential impact of public education and targeted interventions | Hispanics/Latinos | Survey | 193 | 38 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, or FOBT) | Hispanics were more likely to prefer no screening and to prefer sigmoidoscopy over colonoscopy, compared to non-Hispanics |
| Shokar et al (2010) | To describe patient test preferences and to identify test attributes that influence their decision-making | Hispanics/Latinos & African Americans | Cognitive ranking tests | 168 | 108 | Test attribute preferences for colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, FOBT, or barium enema | African Americans ranked accuracy, amount of colon examined, discomfort, and complications as most important. Hispanics considered accuracy, scientific evidence available, and amount of colon examined to be the most important attributes |
| Shokar et al (2005) | To assess knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about cancer, CRC, and CRC screening test preferences | Hispanics/Latinos & African Americans | Interviews | 30 | 20 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, FOBT, barium enema, any modality, no test, or up to doctor) | The most preferred test was FOBT (n=4) for African Americans and colonoscopy (n=5) for whites, but there was no clear preference for Hispanics, who selected colonoscopy (n=3), FOBT (n=2), or had no preference (n=2) |
| Taber et al (2014) | To examine attitudes about the SEPT9 blood test | Hispanics/Latinos & African Americans | Survey | 100 | 62 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, FOBT, or SEPT9 blood test) | Among unscreened individuals, Hispanics were less likely to prefer SEPT9 blood testing than whites, but more likely to prefer SEPT9 than African Americans. Unscreened African Americans were least likely to identify low cost as a positive SEPT9 attribute. Unscreened African Americans were more likely to prefer colonoscopy than unscreened Hispanics and even more likely than unscreened whites |
| Wolf et al (2006) | To understand patient preferences for CRC screening and how these preferences translate into test performance | Hispanic/Latinos & African Americans | Survey | 216 | 164 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, FOBT, or no preference); test attribute preferences | Race was not associated with test preference. FOBT preferred over colonoscopy by the majority of the study population, including blacks, Hispanics, and whites. Among those who preferred FOBT, the main reason was convenience |
| Wolf et al (2016) | To examine the role of patient test preference and CRC screening uptake | Non-white | Survey | 453 | 330 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or home stool test) | Home stool test preferred over colonoscopy more often among whites (69%) compared to non-whites (52%) |
| Zapatier et al (2011) | To evaluate sex and ethnicity preferences for endoscopists | Hispanics/Latinos | Survey | 438 | 195 | Sex and ethnicity preference for endoscopist providers | Hispanic women were more likely to prefer sex of endoscopist to be female. Hispanics were more likely to prefer ethnicity of endoscopist to be Hispanic |
Note:
The size (absolute number) of the vulnerable population is estimated based on percentages available in the study.
Abbreviations: CTC, computed tomographic colonography; DCBE, double-contrast barium enema; DCE, discrete choice experiment; FIT, fecal immunochemical testing; FOBT, fecal occult blood test; RCT, randomized controlled trial; sDNA, stool DNA testing.
Characteristics of studies with low-income populations
| Study | Objective | Study design | Total sample size | Sample size of vulnerable population | Outcome measure | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cho et al (2017) | To investigate patient preferences for CRC screening modality for the National Cancer Screening Program | Survey | 396 | 216 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or FIT) | Higher income was associated with preference for colonoscopy over FIT |
| Frew et al (2001) | To examine the willingness to pay for two types of CRC screening | Survey | 2,767 | 549 | Willingness to pay | Lower income was associated with lower willingness to pay for CRC screening |
| Quick et al (2013) | To examine the effect test-specific barriers have on CRC screening completion, reasons for non-completion, and patterns when participants are allowed to switch modalities | Survey | 418 | 418 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or FIT) | Low-income population preferred colonoscopy (60%) over FIT (40%) at baseline |
| Saengow et al (2015) | To estimate CRC screening test preferences and acceptance and the reasons for decisions about whether to screen | Interviews | 437 | 167 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or FIT) | Lower income was not associated with screening modality preference |
| Waller et al (2012) | To assess public preferences for a CRC screening recommendation within the United Kingdom’s National Health Service Colorectal (Bowel) Cancer Screening Programme | Survey | 1,964 | 701 | Preference for expert recommendation (a strong recommendation for FOBT, a recommendation plus advice to make an individual choice, or no recommendation but advice to make an individual decision) | Lower social grade was not associated with recommendation preference |
| Wong et al (2010) | To evaluate CRC screening test preferences | Survey | 3,430 | 1,006 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or FIT) | Monthly income was not associated with modality preference |
| Wong et al (2012) | To examine factors influencing CRC screening test choice and assess the impact of an educational session on this decision | Survey | 7,845 | 5,026 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or FIT) | Lower income was associated with greater likelihood of changing preference from colonoscopy to FIT after an educational intervention |
| Xu et al (2015) | To assess patient preferences for CRC screening tests | Survey | 667 | 204 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or FIT) | Higher household income was associated with greater likelihood of preference for colonoscopy |
Note:
The size (absolute number) of the vulnerable population is estimated based on percentages available in the study.
Abbreviations: CRC, colorectal cancer screening; FIT, fecal immunochemical testing.
Characteristics of studies with veteran populations
| Study | Objective | Study design | Total sample size | Sample size of vulnerable population | Outcome measure | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akerkar et al (2001) | To assess and compare patients’ experiences with virtual colonoscopy and conventional colonoscopy | Survey | 295 | 295 | Screening test modality preference (conventional colonoscopy or virtual colonoscopy); time tradeoff | Conventional colonoscopy preferred over virtual colonoscopy. Patients were willing to wait an average of 4.9 weeks to undergo conventional colonoscopy relative to virtual colonoscopy from the time of discharge |
| Friedemann-Sánchez et al (2007) | To explore CRC screening barriers, attitudes and preferences by gender | Focus groups | 70 | 70 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, FOBT, or DCBE) | Colonoscopy preferred over other screening modalities and perceived as the “complete” screening examination |
| Imaeda et al (2010) | To elicit patient values about CRC screening test attributes and the influence on test preferences | Maximum difference scaling survey | 92 | 75 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, FOBT, CTC, or colon capsule endoscopy); test attribute preferences | Colonoscopy (62%) preferred over other screening modalities. Test sensitivity, risk of a perforation, and potential need for a follow-up test were identified as the most important attributes |
| Moawad et al (2010) | To assess patient preferences for screening modality | Survey | 250 | 250 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy or CTC) | CTC preferred over colonoscopy by 95% of the study population that completed both colonoscopy and CTC (n=54) |
| Powell et al (2009) | To assess CRC screening modality preferences among US veterans | Survey | 2,068 | 2,068 | Screening test modality preference (colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, FOBT, DCBE, or no screening) | Colonoscopy (37%) and FOBT (29%) preferred over other screening modalities |
| Rajapaksa et al (2007) | To assess potential differences in patient experiences with and preferences for CRC screening modality | Survey | 272 | 272 | Screening test modality preference (optical colonoscopy or CTC) | No significant difference in preference for CTC vs optical colonoscopy in the total study population. Racial and ethnic minorities within the study population were less likely to prefer CRC over optical colonoscopy relative to the white participants |
Abbreviations: CTC, computed tomographic colonography; DCBE, double-contrast barium enema; FOBT, fecal occult blood test.
Characteristics of studies with rural populations
| Study | Objective | Study design | Total sample size | Sample size of vulnerable population | Outcome measure | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pham et al (2017) | To assess patient preferences for FIT characteristics in order to inform regional FIT selection | Survey + focus groups | 18 | 18 | FIT-specific screening test program delivery preferences | FITs that required only one sample, collected samples using a probe and vial, and included descriptive, visual instructions were preferred |
| Pignone et al (2014) | To determine how vulnerable individuals value different aspects of CRC screening programs | DCE | 150 | 150 | Preference for screening program design/delivery, including screening modality options, travel time, money paid for screening, and the portion of the cost of followup care paid out of pocket | Coverage of follow-up costs identified as more important than modality options and travel time |
Abbreviations: DCE, discrete choice experiment; FIT, fecal immunochemical testing.