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Trial Title:
Blue-Button Regional Trial Screening
NCT ID:
NCT05885880
Condition:
Cancer
Conditions: Keywords:
Cancer clinical trials
clinical trials screening
electronic health records (EHR)
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
N/A
Overall status:
Enrolling by invitation
Study design:
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention model:
Parallel Assignment
Primary purpose:
Health Services Research
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Other
Intervention name:
Blue-button screening
Description:
Patients will be screened for clinical trial matches using the Blue-button tool
Arm group label:
Blue-button screening
Summary:
Enrollment in clinical trials predicts better survival in the most common cancer types
including breast cancer, and testing and proving the efficacy of new treatments relies on
successfully conducting clinical trials. However, approximately one fifth of cancer
clinical trials fail due to insufficient patient enrollment, and only about 6% of adult
cancer patients are enrolled onto clinical trials. Barriers remain for patient
participation in clinical trials, especially for cancer patients. One specific barrier is
trial identification and awareness of trial availability for both patients and providers.
This trial tests the hypothesis that by integrating clinical trial eligibility screening
into part of routine care in a way that requires little effort and by making that
screening site agnostic, the Blue-Button matching functionality will increase overall
cancer clinical trial enrollment, and may also result in more diverse clinical trial
participants that better reflect the U.S. cancer population. Moreover, regardless of
changes in enrollment, the Blue-button screening may allow screening to be done more
quickly with fewer human resources when compared to current methods. Identification of
potential trial opportunities, however, is only the first barrier to trial enrollment, so
this study includes additional examination of barriers subsequent to the identification
of relevant trials by cataloging patient-level barriers that prevent enrollment of
patients in identified trials.
Detailed description:
The conduct of cancer clinical trials represents a key final step in testing and proving
the efficacy of new treatments relies on successfully conducting clinical trials.
However, one in five cancer clinical trials fail due to insufficient patient enrollment,
and only about 6% of adult cancer patients are enrolled onto clinical trials, despite the
fact that the majority of Americans view clinical trial participation favorably.
The large gap between the willingness of patients to participate in trials and actual
trial participate rates suggests the prevalence of many barriers to participation in
clinical trials, especially for cancer patients. One specific barrier is trial
identification and awareness of trial availability for both patients and providers.
Identification and recruitment to clinical trials can be difficult and time consuming.
Matching cancer patients with trials requires a challenging amount of manual entry and/or
manual review of trials, and frequently this is not integrated into existing clinical
workflows. As a result, for many patients, a locally available trial may not be
identified, or patients who are eligible to participate may not be asked to enroll. Taken
together, only about one in four cancer patients will even have the option to participate
in a clinical trial at their institution. Providers do not have the means to easily
identify trials for their patients that are conducted outside the treating healthcare
institution. One solution to help alleviate this problem is to provide basic
site-agnostic trial screening capabilities using electronic health records (EHRs), which
already exist in nearly all care settings.
ACS CAN, through a collaboration with the MITRE organization, has developed open-source
integrated clinical trial screening functionality ("Blue-button") to address a lack of
in-workflow tools for providers to prescreen cancer patients for clinical trials.
Blue-button was developed through the Common Oncology Data Elements Extensions (CodeX)
application of MITRE's Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resource (FHIR) accelerator (FHIR
is a draft data standard developed by HL7 International). The Blue-button functionality
works within existing EHRs to enable patients or providers to initiate a prescreen for
relevant trials for a given patient within a specified radius of the practice. This is
done by automatically extracting and sending eight, deidentified single-patient data
elements to existing trial matching services which return potential trial matches. The
eight patient data elements used for prescreening, referred to as the optimized patient
data elements (OPDE), include age, cancer type, cancer subtype, presence of metastasis,
stage, biomarkers, prior treatments, and performance status. The user of the application
has the ability to add/edit any of the eight data elements that may be missing or
incorrect prior to sending to services. The Blue-button tool (more formally known as the
Clinical Trial Matching SMART on FHIR App) then sends the patient OPDE to Minimal Common
Oncology Data Elements (mCODE) enabled clinical trial matching services.
Currently, many patients who would be willing to participate in a clinical trial are
either not currently being screened or are only screened against limited onsite trials.
Thus, the goal of this study is to examine whether the use of a Blue-button trial
screening tool can increase the participation of patients in cancer clinical trials. The
hypothesis is that the routine use of the site agnostic Blue-button matching
functionality will make clinical trial screening easier for both sites and patients. In
so doing, its use will not only increase overall cancer clinical trial enrollment but
will be especially advantageous for increasing enrollment for historically
underrepresented populations, resulting in more diverse clinical trial participants that
better reflect the U.S. cancer population. Moreover, regardless of changes in enrollment,
the Blue-button screening tool may allow screening to be done more quickly with fewer
human resources when compared to current methods. Additionally, because this study
follows patients longitudinally over time to record key details about trial
decision-making, the study will examine patient-level barriers for individuals eligible
for an available trial who decline to participate.
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Adult cancer patients attending clinic visit at which they would be screened for
clinical trial participation
Exclusion Criteria:
- under age 18 years
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
N/A
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
University of South Florida
Address:
City:
Tampa
Zip:
33602
Country:
United States
Facility:
Name:
University of Texas Southwestern Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center
Address:
City:
Dallas
Zip:
75390
Country:
United States
Start date:
December 1, 2023
Completion date:
June 2025
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network
Agency class:
Other
Source:
American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05885880