Colorectal Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
ColonCancerCheck Mailed Invitations: An Evaluation
This study evaluates effectiveness of mailed invitations for colorectal cancer screening among screen-eligible Ontarians who are due for screening. The study will evaluate the effectiveness of mailed invitations in general (compared to no invitation) but will also determine if new invitation letters (2 letters for male, 1 letter for females) are more effective than current invitation letters used by the ColonCancerCheck program.
On April 1 2008, Ontario launched Canada's first organized province-wide CRC screening
program, ColonCancerCheck (CCC). CCC has a dual strategy: through the primary care
physician, FOBT is offered to people aged 50 to 74 years at average risk for colorectal
cancer and colonoscopy to those at increased risk based on family history. In 2010-2011,
approximately 30% of Ontarians 50-74 years old were screened for colorectal cancer using the
FOBT. An important factor in increasing screening participation is an invitation system.
A central tenet of organized screening programs is that all persons in the target population
be invited to participate. In 2010, CCC began implementing a correspondence program in an
effort to improve participation in colorectal cancer screening, starting with recall letters
to individuals who were due for repeat screening two years after a normal fecal occult blood
test (FOBT) and invitation letters to screen-eligible individuals who are due for screening
and have not received correspondence from CCO to participate in colorectal cancer screening
in the past two years to complete a screening test for colorectal cancer. Individuals who
are "due for screening" includes those who have not had a FOBT in the past 2 years, a
flexible sigmoidoscopy in the past 5 years, and a colonoscopy in the past 10 years.
Currently, CCC sends 10,000 invitation letters monthly to 50-54 year olds only. In October
2013, the CCC correspondence program expanded to also include all eligible Ontarians 55-74
years old.
The current CCC invitation letter includes general information on the benefits of screening
for colorectal cancer, the screening test itself (FOBT), and contact information to get more
information. It is meant to invite individuals to speak with their primary care provider
about colorectal screening. In 2013 Diego Llovet, a lead qualitative researcher at CCO,
completed a series of qualitative studies examining the content of current CCC
correspondence materials and made recommendations to improve the content of invitation
letters. These recommendations were based on four key types of information: a) findings from
seven focus groups with screen-eligible Ontarians (men and women, 50-74) who provided
feedback on the messages that should be included in these letters, b) input provided by six
experts in health communications and health promotion on the content and style of effective
cancer screening correspondence, c) evidence from behavioral science studies on barriers to
participation in colorectal cancer screening, and d) theories of health behavior change.
Based on findings from focus group studies examining the content of the current CCC letter,
a unisex and a male-tailored invitation letter were developed. A female-tailored letter was
not developed as the focus group studies with females showed that they did not prefer female
tailored messaging to a unisex one.
In the current study, we propose to test the effectiveness of mailed invitations for
colorectal cancer screening in the real world setting of the CCC program. We will evaluate
the effectiveness of mailed invitations in general (i.e., compared to no invitation) but we
will also determine whether letters developed based on theories from behavioural science and
on the results of qualitative studies with Ontarians in the target population are more
effective than those currently used by the program. The findings from this study will be
used to inform the CCC program correspondence but will also provide valuable information for
the development of correspondence for other screening programs at Cancer Care Ontario and in
other jurisdictions engaged in organized screening programs.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Screening
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