Uterine Cervical Neoplasms Clinical Trial
Official title:
Facilitating Follow-Up Adherence for Abnormal Pap Smears
Objective: Previous studies have suggested that psycho-educational interventions delivered
by telephone improve adherence to initial colposcopy after an abnormal Pap smear. To further
explore strategies for enhanced follow-up to medical care recommendations, we studied the
impact of a theory-guided cognitive-affective barriers counseling intervention, delivered at
2-4 weeks before the colposcopy appointment, for inner city women. The comprehensive
telephone barriers intervention was compared to an enhanced comparison group and a group
that received tailored print materials.
Methods: Participants (N = 211) were recruited through a colposcopy clinic and randomly
assigned to: 1) telephone assessment of barriers to follow up adherence recommendations
combined with tailored telephone barriers counseling; 2) telephone assessment combined with
tailored barriers print brochure; or 3) telephone assessment with no barriers counseling.
Participants were assessed at baseline, 1-week, 9 and 15 months post-colposcopy.
Objective: Previous studies have shown that theory-based, tailored telephone barriers
counseling significantly improves adherence to a colposcopy appointment after an abnormal
pap smear result among low-income, minority women. This study built on these research
findings and explored the efficacy of a state-of-the-science telephone counseling
intervention utilizing a more rigorous study design. This enhanced counseling intervention
was tailored to individual's distinctive cognitive-affective barriers profile, as assessed
by the Cognitive-Social Health Information Processing (C-SHIP) model-guided barriers
assessment tool, and with counseling messages targeted to all five domains of individual's
barriers to adherence. In addition, the current study design was improved in two ways.
First, the comparison group in this current study was an enhanced one that received a
notification letter, assessment of cognitive-affective barriers by telephone, and a
telephone appointment reminder. Second, this study had a longer follow-up period to allow
testing of the intervention effect beyond initial colposcopy adherence. The participants
were followed for 15 months post-colposcopy so that participants' adherence to medical
follow-up recommendations (if any) within the 12 months after initial colposcopy can be
collected and studied. Adherence to medical follow-up at 6 months and 12 months was measured
at 9 months and 15 months, respectively, to allow 3 months for rescheduling, attending, and
recording of the appointment. Overall, this study tested whether an enhanced tailored
telephone barriers counseling intervention improve adherence to medical follow-up after
abnormal pap smear among low-income, minority women.
Methods:
METHODS Participants (211) were randomized to the following baseline conditions: a) standard
care (SC), i.e., a cognitive-affective barriers (CAB) assessment delivered via phone,
receipt of a notification letter from physician regarding abnormal Pap test result and need
to undergo colposcopy, and also including appointment date and clinic contact numbers, plus
telephone confirmation and post-card appointment reminder; b) SC plus CAB counseling
delivered by phone (CAB-C -T), i.e., culturally-relevant/sensitive barrier-specific messages
drawn from a pre-developed library designed to counsel individuals regarding their specific
barriers to adherence, e.g., by increasing risk-related knowledge, providing accurate
outcome and self-efficacy expectancies, addressing health-related values and goals,
moderating risk-related affect, or offering active plans and strategies to assist with
self-regulation; c) SC plus CAB counseling delivered via Mail-Home Print Material (CAB-C-P),
which included exactly the same applicable messages as were delivered by phone, but in print
form. The tailoring of messages to a participant's cognitive-affective barriers profile was
based on the two barriers in each of the five Cognitive-Social Health Information Processing
(C-SHIP) categories (a total of 10 messages) that she rated most important on a five-point
scale. There were 23 cognitive-affective adherence barriers grouped into the following
C-SHIP categories: 1) risk-related encodings/perceptions (i.e., purpose of colposcopy,
presence and progression of HPV-related disease); 2) risk-related expectancies and beliefs
(i.e., confidence in ability to keep appointment, fatalistic beliefs about cancer); 3)
risk-related values and goals (i.e., maintaining modesty, importance of having children); 4)
risk-related affect (i.e., worries about necessary procedures and/or progression of disease,
concerns regarding fertility); and 5) risk-related self-regulation (i.e., remembering
appointment, overcoming child-care or work-related conflicts, transportation difficulties,
ability to manage any negative risk-related affect). With regard to assessments, they were
conducted at the following time points: baseline, and 1-week, 9-month, and 15-month
post-colposcopy and included the following: the CAB assessment; background variables,
including demographic (e.g., gender, age, ethnicity, education, marital and employment
status, household income, number of children); medical and screening history (e.g., cancer
diagnosis, previous Pap smears and frequency; breast exams (self and clinical); mammograms
and abnormal results; results of the index colposcopy and physician recommendations from
medical records; a potential moderating dispositional variable, attentional style
(Monitoring-Blunting Style Scale); potential mediating variables, including affective
variables (Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, the Center for Epidemiological
Studies-Depression Scale), and cognitive-affective process variables (knowledge, risk
perceptions, expectancies and beliefs, affect, values and goals, regulatory skills); outcome
variables, including adherence to initial diagnostic colposcopy and to 6- and 12-months
colposcopically-based follow-up diagnostic and medical management recommendations, and an
intervention evaluation. All assessments used scales developed in previous research, except
the Powe Fatalism Inventory used to assess fatalism and the Revised Impact of Events Scale
used to assess affect (i.e., stress-related intrusive and avoidant thoughts). Assessed at
baseline were background variables (except medical recommendations), the moderating
variable, and all mediating variables. The cognitive-affective barriers were assessed only
at baseline. Assessed at 1-week post-colposcopy and at the 9-month and 15 month follow-ups
were all mediating variables (except the cognitive-affect barriers) and outcome variables.
The medical recommendations were assessed only at the 1-week post-colposcopy. Medical
history was also re-assessed at the 15-month follow-up relating to the interim period from
baseline.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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