Development, acceptability, appropriateness and appeal of a cancer clinical trials implementation intervention for rural- and minority-serving urology practices

Abstract Background Few community urologists offer cancer patients the opportunity to participate in cancer clinical trials, despite national guidelines that recommend it, depriving an estimated 260,000 urological cancer patients of guideline-concordant care each year. Existing strategies to increas...

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Main Authors: Shellie Ellis, Mugur Geana, Tomas Griebling, Charles McWilliams, Jessie Gills, Kelly Stratton, Christine Mackay, Ariel Shifter, Andrew Zganjar, Brantley Thrasher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-10-01
Series:Trials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13063-019-3658-z
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spelling doaj-89401278052f41e9b6d02b2319ac4b492020-11-25T03:53:47ZengBMCTrials1745-62152019-10-0120111310.1186/s13063-019-3658-zDevelopment, acceptability, appropriateness and appeal of a cancer clinical trials implementation intervention for rural- and minority-serving urology practicesShellie Ellis0Mugur Geana1Tomas Griebling2Charles McWilliams3Jessie Gills4Kelly Stratton5Christine Mackay6Ariel Shifter7Andrew Zganjar8Brantley Thrasher9Department of Population Health, University of Kansas School of MedicineSchool of Journalism and Mass Communications, University of KansasDepartment of Urology and The Landon Center on Aging, University of Kansas School of MedicineDepartment of Urology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences CenterDepartment of Urology, Louisiana State University Health Sciences CenterDepartment of Urology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences CenterDepartment of Population Health, University of Kansas School of MedicineDepartment of Population Health, University of Kansas School of MedicineDepartment of Urology, University of Kansas School of MedicineDepartment of Urology, University of Kansas School of MedicineAbstract Background Few community urologists offer cancer patients the opportunity to participate in cancer clinical trials, despite national guidelines that recommend it, depriving an estimated 260,000 urological cancer patients of guideline-concordant care each year. Existing strategies to increase urologists’ offer of clinical trials are designed for resource-rich environments and are not feasible for many community urologists. We sought to design an implementation intervention for dissemination in under-resourced community urology practices and to compare its acceptability, appropriateness and adoption appeal among trial-naïve and trial-experienced urologists. Methods We used a design-for-dissemination approach, informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework and Behavior Change Wheel, to match determinants of the clinical trial offer to theoretically informed implementation strategies. We described the implementation intervention in evaluation workshops offered at urology professional society meetings. We surveyed participants to assess the implementation intervention’s acceptability and appropriateness using validated instruments. We also measured adoption appeal, intention to adopt and previous trial offer. Results Our design process resulted in a multi-modal implementation intervention, comprised of multiple implementation strategies designed to address six domains from the Theoretical Domains Framework. Evaluation workshops delivered at four meetings, convened five separate professional societies. Sixty-one percent of those offered an opportunity to participate in the implementation intervention indicated intention to adopt. Average implementation intervention acceptability and appropriateness ratings were 4.4 and 4.4 (out of 5), respectively. Acceptability scores were statistically significantly higher among those offering trials compared to those not (p = 0.03). Appropriateness scores did not differ between those offering trials and those not (p = 0.24). After urologists ranked their top three innovation attributes, 43% of urologists included practice reputation in their top three reasons for offering clinical trials; 30% listed practice differentiation among their top three reasons. No statistically significant differences were found between those who offered trials and those who did not among any of the innovation attributes. Conclusions LEARN|INFORM|RECRUIT is a promising implementation intervention to address low accrual to clinical trials, poised for implementation and effectiveness testing. The implementation intervention is appealing to its target audience and may have equal uptake among trial-naïve and trial-experienced practices.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13063-019-3658-zImplementation scienceDesign for disseminationHealth care deliveryClinical practice guidelinesSpecialty careCancer clinical trials
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shellie Ellis
Mugur Geana
Tomas Griebling
Charles McWilliams
Jessie Gills
Kelly Stratton
Christine Mackay
Ariel Shifter
Andrew Zganjar
Brantley Thrasher
spellingShingle Shellie Ellis
Mugur Geana
Tomas Griebling
Charles McWilliams
Jessie Gills
Kelly Stratton
Christine Mackay
Ariel Shifter
Andrew Zganjar
Brantley Thrasher
Development, acceptability, appropriateness and appeal of a cancer clinical trials implementation intervention for rural- and minority-serving urology practices
Trials
Implementation science
Design for dissemination
Health care delivery
Clinical practice guidelines
Specialty care
Cancer clinical trials
author_facet Shellie Ellis
Mugur Geana
Tomas Griebling
Charles McWilliams
Jessie Gills
Kelly Stratton
Christine Mackay
Ariel Shifter
Andrew Zganjar
Brantley Thrasher
author_sort Shellie Ellis
title Development, acceptability, appropriateness and appeal of a cancer clinical trials implementation intervention for rural- and minority-serving urology practices
title_short Development, acceptability, appropriateness and appeal of a cancer clinical trials implementation intervention for rural- and minority-serving urology practices
title_full Development, acceptability, appropriateness and appeal of a cancer clinical trials implementation intervention for rural- and minority-serving urology practices
title_fullStr Development, acceptability, appropriateness and appeal of a cancer clinical trials implementation intervention for rural- and minority-serving urology practices
title_full_unstemmed Development, acceptability, appropriateness and appeal of a cancer clinical trials implementation intervention for rural- and minority-serving urology practices
title_sort development, acceptability, appropriateness and appeal of a cancer clinical trials implementation intervention for rural- and minority-serving urology practices
publisher BMC
series Trials
issn 1745-6215
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background Few community urologists offer cancer patients the opportunity to participate in cancer clinical trials, despite national guidelines that recommend it, depriving an estimated 260,000 urological cancer patients of guideline-concordant care each year. Existing strategies to increase urologists’ offer of clinical trials are designed for resource-rich environments and are not feasible for many community urologists. We sought to design an implementation intervention for dissemination in under-resourced community urology practices and to compare its acceptability, appropriateness and adoption appeal among trial-naïve and trial-experienced urologists. Methods We used a design-for-dissemination approach, informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework and Behavior Change Wheel, to match determinants of the clinical trial offer to theoretically informed implementation strategies. We described the implementation intervention in evaluation workshops offered at urology professional society meetings. We surveyed participants to assess the implementation intervention’s acceptability and appropriateness using validated instruments. We also measured adoption appeal, intention to adopt and previous trial offer. Results Our design process resulted in a multi-modal implementation intervention, comprised of multiple implementation strategies designed to address six domains from the Theoretical Domains Framework. Evaluation workshops delivered at four meetings, convened five separate professional societies. Sixty-one percent of those offered an opportunity to participate in the implementation intervention indicated intention to adopt. Average implementation intervention acceptability and appropriateness ratings were 4.4 and 4.4 (out of 5), respectively. Acceptability scores were statistically significantly higher among those offering trials compared to those not (p = 0.03). Appropriateness scores did not differ between those offering trials and those not (p = 0.24). After urologists ranked their top three innovation attributes, 43% of urologists included practice reputation in their top three reasons for offering clinical trials; 30% listed practice differentiation among their top three reasons. No statistically significant differences were found between those who offered trials and those who did not among any of the innovation attributes. Conclusions LEARN|INFORM|RECRUIT is a promising implementation intervention to address low accrual to clinical trials, poised for implementation and effectiveness testing. The implementation intervention is appealing to its target audience and may have equal uptake among trial-naïve and trial-experienced practices.
topic Implementation science
Design for dissemination
Health care delivery
Clinical practice guidelines
Specialty care
Cancer clinical trials
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13063-019-3658-z
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