Skip to content

Dissemination of Colorectal Cancer Screening to Primary Care Physicians

Dissemination of Colorectal Cancer Screening to Primary Care Physicians

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00441311
Enrollment
264
Registered
2007-02-28
Start date
2003-05-31
Completion date
2006-09-30
Last updated
2011-02-01

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

Conditions

Colorectal Cancer

Keywords

colorectal cancer screening, primary care physicians, health disparities, stratified randomized clinical trial

Brief summary

The aim is to assess the efficacy of an intervention, academic detailing, a brief, frequently repeated educational program, on increasing recommendations for colorectal cancer screening among primary care providers by comparison to a service-as-usual control. The study is a stratified randomized clinical trial of primary care physicians, stratified by distinct urban communities in the New York metropolitan area. The primary outcome is colorectal cancer screening recommendations measured via medical audit at 12-month followup after randomization.

Detailed description

The purpose of the present study is to adapt and extend the use of academic detailing to the dissemination of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening findings and guidelines to primary care physicians practicing in selected geographic areas in New York City. Since improving implementation of cancer screening guidelines also involves compliance by patients in completing the recommended tests or examinations, we will also seek to assess knowledge, attitude and screening behaviors of patients visiting primary care practitioners in our sample. Our long-term goal is to reduce colorectal cancer mortality among ethnic and racial minorities, by influencing the screening behaviors of their primary care physicians. The specific aims of the study are as follows: * Aim 1. To test the hypothesis that an intervention, multi-component academic detailing, will increase the rate of physician CRC screening at 3and 6month postrandomization, compared to the rate observed in a serviceasusual control. * Aim 2. To develop models predicting which physician offices are most and least likely to adopt the intervention, and to generate hypotheses about tailoring the dissemination of CRC screening guidelines to different physician subgroups. * Aim 3. To conduct cost-effectiveness analysis comparing the incremental societal costs and effects (in lives saved, life-years saved, and quality-of-life-years saved) of the CRC intervention implemented in physicians' offices.

Interventions

The academic detailing intervention will involve multiple components some of which are standardized across physicians (i.e. self-learning packets, newsletters). Detailing will also be customized to each physician, although the frequency of the detailing visits will be routinized across all participants to reduce cost and to maximize its potential for dissemination.

Sponsors

American Cancer Society, Inc.
CollaboratorOTHER
Columbia University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
50 Years to 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Devote at least 50% of their practice to primary care * Work in the study communities * Are non-hospital based community practitioners * Have no immediate plans to retire or to leave their practice.

Exclusion criteria

* Specialty physicians * Intend to retire or otherwise leave practice over course of the study * Other conditions that would preclude meaningful participation * Not working in study communities

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Colorectal cancer screening recommendationsUp to 12 months from the time of randomization

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

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