Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Breast cancer is the most commonly occurring cancer and most common cause of cancer mortality among Korean American (KA) women, but mammography utilization among KA women remains suboptimal. Most breast cancer screening studies with KA women have been descriptive and correlational. Therefore, in this 4-year project, the effects of Korean Immigrants & Mammography—Culture-Specific Health Intervention (KIM-CHI) on adherence to recommended breast cancer screening protocols were tested. The specific aims are to: (1) compare the group receiving KIM-CHI with an attention control group on mammogram attainment outcomes including number of mammograms obtained (0, 1, or 2) and if obtained, length of time to obtain the first mammogram, at 15 months using survival analysis; (2) compare the two groups on the mediating variables of health beliefs, knowledge, self-efficacy, and spousal support at 2 weeks, 6 months, and 15 months using repeated measures multivariate analysis of variance; and (3) identify the mediating effects of health beliefs, knowledge, self-efficacy, and spousal support at 2 weeks on mammogram attainment outcomes at 15 months, using structural equation modeling. Data on mammography attainment and the mediating variables were collected at baseline and at 2-weeks, and 6- and 15-months post-baseline.


Clinical Trial Description

In this two-group cluster randomized, longitudinal, controlled design, the KIM-CHI and control activities were delivered immediately after baseline data collection at 50 KA religious organizations. Participants in the attention control group followed the same study procedures as participants in the KIM-CHI group, except for the content of the educational films. The baseline and longitudinal data were collected from August 2008 to September 2010 in Cook County, Illinois.

The KIM-CHI group slogan was "Healthy Family, Healthy Wife," and the control group slogan was "Healthy Family, Healthy Diet," emphasizing the importance of the husband's support in promoting family health by improving breast cancer screening or diet in the KIM-CHI and attention control groups, respectively.

The KIM-CHI program consisted of (1) showing a project team-designed 30-minute Korean language film (in DVD format) on breast cancer screening to change health beliefs; (2) holding a brief group discussion session immediately after the film showing; and (3) requiring each couple to complete a discussion activity together at home to enhance spousal support for the women.

A total of 516 women were assessed for eligibility for this study from August 2008 to June 2009. 428 KA women were recruited at baseline. The response rates for returning homework activity in intervention and control groups were 98.1% (207/211) and 98.6% (214/217), respectively.

All the variables reported are from KA women, but socio-demographic variables are from both KA women and their husbands. Mammography uptake was measured by self-report at 6- months and 15-months post-baseline, based on the ACS guideline recommending that women 40 and older receive a mammogram every year. Predictor variables measured were age, education, employment, and level of acculturation. Level of acculturation was measured by the Suinn-Lew Asian Self-Identity Acculturation Scale (SL-ASIA). The SL-ASIA was modified slightly by deleting one item about generation because it was not relevant for first-generation KAs. The words "Asian" and "Oriental" in the original instrument were also changed to "Korean." Scoring for the revised SL-ASIA was the same as the original SL-ASIA, using a 5-point Likert scale with a final score ranging from 1.00 (low acculturation) to 5.00 (high acculturation). Questions on health care resources and utilization, health insurance status, usual source of care (a regular place or doctor to visit), and physical examinations in the past 2 years without sickness or for health problems were measured. Family history of breast cancer and history of mammography (when the last mammogram was, if they ever had one) were also measured.

After Human Subjects Review Approval was obtained, invitation letters were mailed to all 210 religious organizations listed in the Korean language Chicago Korean Business Directory 2006. One hundred KA organizations were contacted to request participation in the study and 110 KA religious organizations were treated as "unable to reach." Of those 100 contacted organizations, 32 were ineligible (e.g., they were younger KAs, students, multi-ethnics, or disabled persons). Eighteen of the remaining 68 eligible organizations (26.5%) refused to participate. The 50 organizations were randomly assigned to either the KIM-CHI or attention control group. After random assignment, the characteristics of religious organizations (location and size) were not statistically significantly different between the two groups.

A total of 428 couples participated in this study at baseline; 211 wife-husband dyads from 26 KIM-CHI organizations and 217 wife-husband dyads from 24 attention control organizations. KA women and their husbands who were interested in participating in our study signed two copies of an informed consent form. Next, each completed a self-administered baseline questionnaire which took 30-45 minutes. Then they received the KIM-CHI or control education.

Six- and 15-month post-baseline data were collected via phone by telephone surveyors who were blind to the study group assignment. At 6-months, 414 women participated in the telephone survey in Korean, with 3.3% lost to follow-up. At 15-months post-baseline, 395 women participated in the telephone survey, with 7.7% lost to follow-up, for the entire study period. The reasons for lost to follow-up were death, refused to participate, or unable to contract. KA women included at the 15 months' data collection (n = 395) and those who dropped out (n = 33) did not differ in demographic or other major variables in this study. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Screening


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01525264
Study type Interventional
Source Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date August 2008
Completion date October 2010

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04681911 - Inetetamab Combined With Pyrotinib and Chemotherapy in the Treatment of HER2 Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer Phase 2
Terminated NCT04066790 - Pyrotinib or Trastuzumab Plus Nab-paclitaxel as Neoadjuvant Therapy in HER2-positive Breast Cancer Phase 2
Completed NCT04890327 - Web-based Family History Tool N/A
Completed NCT03591848 - Pilot Study of a Web-based Decision Aid for Young Women With Breast Cancer, During the Proposal for Preservation of Fertility N/A
Recruiting NCT03954197 - Evaluation of Priming Before in Vitro Maturation for Fertility Preservation in Breast Cancer Patients N/A
Terminated NCT02202746 - A Study to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of the VEGFR-FGFR-PDGFR Inhibitor, Lucitanib, Given to Patients With Metastatic Breast Cancer Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT01472094 - The Hurria Older PatiEnts (HOPE) With Breast Cancer Study
Withdrawn NCT06057636 - Hypnosis for Pain in Black Women With Advanced Breast Cancer: A Feasibility Study N/A
Completed NCT06049446 - Combining CEM and Magnetic Seed Localization of Non-Palpable Breast Tumors
Recruiting NCT05560334 - A Single-Arm, Open, Exploratory Clinical Study of Pemigatinib in the Treatment of HER2-negative Advanced Breast Cancer Patients With FGFR Alterations Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT05501769 - ARV-471 in Combination With Everolimus for the Treatment of Advanced or Metastatic ER+, HER2- Breast Cancer Phase 1
Recruiting NCT04631835 - Phase I Study of the HS-10352 in Patients With Advanced Breast Cancer Phase 1
Completed NCT04307407 - Exercise in Breast Cancer Survivors N/A
Recruiting NCT03544762 - Correlation of 16α-[18F]Fluoro-17β-estradiol PET Imaging With ESR1 Mutation Phase 3
Terminated NCT02482389 - Study of Preoperative Boost Radiotherapy N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT00068003 - Harvesting Cells for Experimental Cancer Treatments
Completed NCT00226967 - Stress, Diurnal Cortisol, and Breast Cancer Survival
Recruiting NCT06006390 - CEA Targeting Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Lymphocytes (CAR-T) in the Treatment of CEA Positive Advanced Solid Tumors Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT06037954 - A Study of Mental Health Care in People With Cancer N/A
Recruiting NCT06019325 - Rhomboid Intercostal Plane Block on Chronic Pain Incidence and Acute Pain Scores After Mastectomy N/A