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| Funder | NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University of California, San Francisco |
| Country | United States |
| Start Date | May 16, 2022 |
| End Date | Feb 28, 2027 |
| Duration | 1,749 days |
| Number of Grantees | 2 |
| Roles | Principal Investigator; Co-Investigator |
| Data Source | NIH (US) |
| Grant ID | 10795660 |
Project Summary Follow-up colonoscopy after abnormal stool-based colorectal cancer screening (e.g., fecal immunochemical test (FIT)) results in early detection of colorectal cancer (CRC), prevention of CRC, and reduction in CRC-mortality. FIT is a commonly utilized screening test that can be performed at home, is inexpensive, scalable, and often
adopted in health systems where colonoscopy resources are scarce. Despite evidence that timely colonoscopy is necessary after an abnormal FIT result, completion colonoscopy occurs in less than 50% of patients at 6 months and varies significantly by clinic and health systems. In addition to understanding the meaning of an
abnormal FIT, three care transitions must occur smoothly for the patient: colonoscopy referral, scheduling, and attendance. However, multilevel factors influence missed follow-up, and multilevel solutions are needed along the care continuum to address clinic-, provider-, and patient-level factors that impair or delay colonoscopy
completion. IMProving Adherence to Colonoscopy through Teams and Technology (IMPACTT), proposes to close gaps and reduce disparities in CRC screening by improving completion of diagnostic colonoscopy following abnormal FIT in vulnerable populations using a multilevel approach consisting of interventions at the clinic-, provider- and
patient-level. The specific aims are 1) to evaluate the effect of a clinic-level intervention targeting primary care providers and staff to adopt “best practices” to support colonoscopy completion in patients with abnormal FIT results, 2) to determine the effect of a patient-level technology intervention with enhanced instructions
and navigation for patients with abnormal FIT to complete a diagnostic colonoscopy, and 3) to explore the multilevel implementation factors contributing to intervention outcomes using mixed methods. IMPACTT is situated in a publicly-funded, urban safety-net health system that cares for diverse, low-income
patients with a high prevalence of limited health literacy and English proficiency. In order to develop solutions that work for vulnerable patients that are at particular risk to incomplete follow-up, interventions must be conducted in the settings that serve them. In addition, given the complexity of patient health behaviors and the
multi-step process of colonoscopy completion, scalable interventions are needed. This proposal is feasible in this health system because 1) FIT screening is standard practice for CRC screening, 2) the system’s 12 primary care clinics is integrated with one gastroenterology practice, and 3) primary care and specialty care share an
electronic health record and consultation system. These characteristics offer an infrastructure for implementation and evaluation, facilitated by effective care coordination and communication. IMPACTT is positioned to develop a multilevel intervention to improve CRC follow-up for vulnerable populations, which holds the potential to reduce
health disparities in other health systems as well as lay the foundation to address other health conditions and behaviors.
University of California, San Francisco
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