To hear about similar clinical trials, please enter your email below
Trial Title:
Community Clinic Model to Improve Early Detection of Breast and Cervical Cancers in Kenya
NCT ID:
NCT06572774
Condition:
Breast Cancer
Cervical Cancer
Conditions: Official terms:
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
N/A
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention model:
Parallel Assignment
Intervention model description:
We are randomly assigning women to the three study arms. We are also requesting that the
women select one caregiver for inclusion in the caregiver education sessions
Primary purpose:
Screening
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Behavioral
Intervention name:
C3Link Strategies
Description:
Education sessions and community liaison support to link to services
Arm group label:
C3Link Plus Strategies
Arm group label:
C3Link strategies
Arm group label:
One-time education
Summary:
Kenya has a high incidence of breast and cervical cancers, and most women are diagnosed
with late-stage disease. The investigators will conduct a study to assess the
effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of strategies to increase the uptake of cancer
screening and completion of recommended diagnostic and treatment services. The findings
can be used to design optimal approaches and plan investments in infrastructure to scale
up implementation of breast and cervical cancer screening.
Detailed description:
Kenya has a high incidence of breast and cervical cancers, and most women are diagnosed
with late-stage disease. Implementing effective programs to screen and detect these
cancers at an early stage could substantially decrease the high mortality. Kenya has been
increasing access to cancer screening, but less than one-sixth of eligible women have
ever received breast and cervical cancer screening.
The goal of the study is to assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of
multicomponent strategies to increase the uptake of breast and cervical cancer screening.
A key gap that perpetuates the low screening rates in Kenya is the lack of
community-clinic linkages. There is evidence that women are often unaware of the
screening services offered in facilities, and, even among those who are aware, there is
lack of motivation, anticipated or perceived stigma, and reduced self-efficacy to undergo
screening. The investigators will conduct a pragmatic cluster randomized trial to
evaluate the screening outcomes, including screening uptake, diagnostic test completion,
and treatment initiation and implementation outcomes to support scale-up. The
investigators will test two multicomponent packages of strategies: (1) Cancer
Community-Clinic Linkage (C3Link) Core: Community health volunteer (CHV)-delivered group
education for women and family members to increase screening uptake in the community
setting and practice facilitation to improve the screening process and develop team-based
care with CHV participation in the clinic setting; (2) C3Link Plus: C3Link Core
strategies along with a sequential series of individual strategies that increase in
intensity at 3-month intervals; women who remain unscreened will first receive one-on-one
education; second, motivational interviewing; and, finally, navigation to address
specific barriers.
The investigators will implement the study across 27 communities in Kenya to address the
following three specific aims: Aim 1: Conduct a cluster randomized trial to assess
short-term (intervention implementation phase) and longer-term impacts (maintenance
phase) of the two packages of multicomponent strategies on breast and cervical cancer
screening outcomes along the continuum of care compared to enhanced standard of care
(communities receiving a messaging campaign only); Aim 2: Use a mixed-methods approach to
assess and compare multilevel implementation outcomes of the package of strategies
focusing on acceptability, feasibility, appropriateness, fidelity, and sustainability;
Aim 3: Perform cost-effectiveness and return-on-investment analysis to support scale-up
of an effective package of implementation strategies across Kenya and other sub-Saharan
African countries. The Kenyan Ministry of Health can use the findings from this study to
design optimal approaches and plan investments in screening infrastructure to scale up
implementation of guideline recommendations. The lessons learned can be applied to other
sub-Saharan African settings.
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Women will be eligible to participate if they are 30 to 55 years old, due to receive
both breast and cervical cancer screening during the study intervention
implementation phase based on Kenyan guideline recommendations, not experiencing
breast or cervical cancer symptoms (will be referred for diagnostic testing with
facilitation support from the study team), not pregnant, fluent in a study language
(English,Kiswahili, Kamba, Kalenjin, and Kikuyu) and plan to remain in the community
for at least 2 years
Exclusion Criteria:
-
Gender:
Female
Minimum age:
30 Years
Maximum age:
55 Years
Healthy volunteers:
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Public Health Facilities in Machakos, Nyeri and Nakuru
Address:
City:
Machakos
Country:
Kenya
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Robai Gakunga
Start date:
September 9, 2024
Completion date:
January 31, 2028
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Implenomics
Agency class:
Other
Collaborator:
Agency:
Kenya Medical Research Institute
Agency class:
Other
Collaborator:
Agency:
RTI International
Agency class:
Other
Source:
Implenomics
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT06572774