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Kukui Ahi Navigator Cancer Screening and Treatment Demonstration Project

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00379782
Enrollment
628
Registered
2006-09-22
Start date
2006-10-31
Completion date
2011-03-31
Last updated
2011-05-30

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Breast Cancer, Cervical Cancer, Prostate Cancer, Colorectal Cancer, Lung Cancer

Brief summary

This Cancer Prevention and Treatment Demonstration Project funded by the Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services awarded six sites across the United States to develop Patient Navigator Programs to eliminate disparities in the rate of preventative cancer screening and timely diagnosis and treatment of cancer for racial and ethnic minorities. This site of Molokai General Hospital are focused on Pacific Islanders and Asian Americans. This program called Kukui Ahi propose to increase screening and early detection for four targeted cancers-breast, cervical, colorectal, and prostate- with lung cancer additionally being included in treatment protocols to improve outcomes and satisfaction by employing a culturally appropriate navigation protocol to facilitate utilization of healthcare services and decrease health barriers. The specific aims of the project is to: 1. Determine if a Navigator Program can reduce the proportion of the targeted cancers diagnosed at a late stage, 2. Determine if the Navigator Program can improve the continuity of health care for cancer patients, 3. Determine if the Navigator Program can improve quality of life and subjective well being of navigated cancer patients, 4. Determine if the Navigator Program is a cost-effective way to reduce cancer care disparities for screenable cancers.

Detailed description

To be eligible, patients must have Medicare parts A and B, not enrolled in a managed care plan, not enrolled in hospice, and if currently have cancer, it must be either breast, cervical, colorectal, lung, or prostate. Patients may be enrolled up to 3 ½ years. After informed consent is obtained, the navigator will administer a CSA triage (attached) to determine if patient has cancer or not. Patients who have never had cancer or been in remission for five years are eligible for the screening arm and then will have the Screening CSA (attached) performed. Cancer screening arm of the study will then go into randomization. Medistat has created a data entry system for randomization via internet. Medstat will create site administrators and CMS staff users. All users have a defined role that controls what they can see and do. Site administrators can perform all functions and create site staff users. Site staff users can only assign protocols. All users must supply a user identification and password to gain access to the site. Patients are qualified for the demonstration by site staff. Cancer status is ascertained via CSA. Sites will assign patient identification number that will be entered along with cancer status onto the website, no personal identification. RTI will then perform randomization protocol determination and log into database. Site reports available by sight only include individual protocol assignments by patient identification number, summarized protocol assignments by site and year, and view all individual assignments made within a time window. Only the site administrator can disenroll patients. RTI will be utilizing block randomization by site and arm (screening/treatment) in even blocks of 10-18 events depending on size of site. The patients that are in the screening intervention group will have the navigational services. The control group will receive only nutritional education. Those patients who have non-study cancers and are not in remission for five years are ineligible for the study. The study cancers will be given a treatment CSA (attached). For those patients with study cancer, the patients will automatically be put in the navigational group. Molokai being such a small community where everyone knows everyone, it was agreed that to have a control group here would appear to be withholding care and cause bias. The control group will come from another community of similar demographics of Kahuku. Both navigational groups will have an initial CSA, annual CSA, and then an exit CSA conducted in the last six months of the program. CMS has not issued the annual or exit CSA at this time. Molokai has agreed to provide no more than 578 patients with delivery of navigational services to no more than 289 patients in the screening arm of the project. Randomization to intervention or control group will be done as above per RTI International, a statistical firm contracted by CMS. Twenty-five cancer or treatment patients will be enrolled for navigational arm on Molokai and 25 control group patients from a neighboring island.

Interventions

Navigation and escourt

Sponsors

Queen's Medical Center
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
21 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

Medicare Part A & B beneficiaries -

Exclusion criteria

No medicare managed care or hospice beneficiaries, no other cancers other than target within 5 years remission. \-

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
subject satisfaction with navigation7/2010

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026