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Brief Title: Decreasing Over Screening and Treatment of Cervical Precancers in Young Women
Official Title: Randomized Trial to Increase Adherence to Cervical Cancer Screening Guidelines for Young Women
Study ID: NCT02270021
Brief Summary: The goal of this study is to prevent over screening and over treatment of young women for cervical precancers, which can result in psychological distress and has been associated with future risk of premature deliveries. Current national guidelines recommend that routine screening be performed at less-frequent intervals and that excisional cervical therapies are discouraged in young women. The objectives of this study are to examine physician- and patient-based interventions designed to decrease over screening and over treatment by increasing adherence to US guidelines for women under 30 years.
Detailed Description: In this study, we compare two different intervention arms that are designed to prevent over screening and over treatment by increasing adherence to the new US cervical cancer screening guidelines and the American Society for Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology (ASCCP) guidelines for the management of abnormal cervical cancer screening tests and cancer precursors. Specifically, the interventions will focus on the newly recommended cervical cancer screening intervals and decreasing the number of colposcopy procedures and cervical procedures for abnormal cytology. This is a cluster randomized trial with individual clinics serving as the clusters. Clinics from the California Family PACT provider network who serve at least 200 female clients per year under 30 years of age will be randomized to one of two arms: 1) ASCCP mobile application (ProvAPP)-based intervention for providers, or 2) ProvAPP + Patient education Tool (Tab) intervention. These groups will be compared to a control comparison group of 28 clinics chosen using propensity score matching based on clinic characteristics such as county and private versus public from the Family PACT claims data. The ProvAPP intervention is for clinicians' mobile phones and will help them maneuver through current guidelines based on patient age and condition. An existing application from the ASCCP will be updated to include screening guidelines and to be more user-friendly. The patient-based Tab intervention will be a patient education tool accessible via URL on a tablet device at the time of check-in to assist in asking questions and evaluating treatment options. The tool will be developed with input from women age 21-29 as well as other stakeholders including Latinas Contra Cancer and the National Cervical Cancer Coalition. It is hypothesized that the ProvAPP+Tab approach will be most successful; all interventions will be more successful than no intervention. Family PACT serves predominantly uninsured women and 40% of clients are Latina. We plan to enroll 7 sites (ProvAPP) and 7 sites (ProvAPP+Tab) into the other intervention arm with an average of 2,800 women to 3,500 women aged 21-29 years per arm (14 sites) with a similar number of sites and women randomly chosen for the comparison arm (28 sites) resulting in a total of 39 sites and 8,400-10,500 women. We will use Family PACT claims data to examine, by age, the number of and average interval between cytology specimens, colposcopy examinations, and the number of excisional procedures.
Minimum Age: 21 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT
Sex: FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers: Yes
University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States
University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States
Name: Anna-Barbara Moscicki, MD
Affiliation: University of California, San Francisco
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR