Randomized Controlled Trial on Colorectal Cancer Screening Among Quality Circles of Primary Care Physicians

NCT03510858 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 44

Last updated 2026-02-27

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

In Switzerland, colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cause of death from cancer with 1600 persons dying from CRC each year. CRC screening can prevent most of these deaths. If screening begins at age 50, with either colonoscopy or faecal immunological test (FIT), the absolute risk of dying from CRC at age 80 can be cut in half. The choice between CRC screening methods can be seen as preference-sensitive condition. FIT can detect CRC at a similar rate as colonoscopy, but cannot detect as many polyps and advanced polyps as colonoscopies. Colonoscopy would seem the best choice for patients who want to reduce their risk of developing CRC or dying from CRC, but colonoscopy is an invasive procedure with rare but serious adverse effects. Patients who choose FIT do not need to prepare their bowels, or take a day off, but instead sample their own stool at home and mail the test to the laboratory. Offering the choice of test might also increase overall screening rates. Guidelines from the US Services Task Force (USPSTF) suggest shared decision making as a method for increasing adherence to screening and elicit patients' preferences for screening options.

Family physicians are recognized as the most trusted professional to discuss CRC screening in Switzerland. However, many primary care physicians (PCPs) appear to prefer colonoscopy over FIT, and the preferred method seems to vary widely between regions. Physician preferences and local medical culture likely determine these choices more than patient preference. It may be possible to reduce the number of PCPs who prescribe only one screening method by encouraging them to diagnose their patient's preferences for screening method. In Switzerland, training PCPs with educational support and decision aids increased the number who intend to prescribe both screening modalities in equal proportions (prescription of both colonoscopy and FIT in equal proportions).

To implement the intervention and determine how and if it changes PCP practice over time, the study will be conducted in quality circles (QCs) of PCPs. QCs are usually groups of 6 to 12 PCPs who meet regularly to reflect on their practice. QCs are a multifaceted, step-based intervention for quality improvement that has gained international traction because they can foster long-lasting behaviour change. In Switzerland, 80% of all PCPs attend QC regularly. Through QCs following the principles of Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) quality improvement cycles, PCPs can find ways to lower structural barriers to screening, assess their screening practices, and give each other feedback.

The study hypothesizes that providing PCPs with evidence summaries on CRC screening, decision aids for patients, and sample FIT tests will increase the number of patients screened for CRC, better balance the selection of screening methods (colonoscopy vs. FIT), increase the proportion of patients with whom PCPs discuss CRC testing, and increase the number of patients who make decision for or against CRC screening.

The outcomes in PCPs of QCs allocated to the intervention group will be compared to those in the control group. The outcomes will be measured through anonymous structured patient data collected on 40 consecutive patients by PCPs and questionnaires filled by PCPs.

To ensure that relevant outcomes important for future implementation and dissemination works are collected, the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework will be followed for structuring the data collection. The RE-AIM framework helps structure the collection of data on the characteristics of the participants invited who finally participate in the study (Reach), on the integration of the planned intervention in their work (Adoption), on the consistency of implementation of the planned intervention by study participants (Implementation), on the maintenance of the intervention effects over time (Maintenance), and finally, on the effectiveness of the intervention on the planned outcomes (Effectiveness). The RE-AIM criteria are useful for identifying the translatability and public health impact of this intervention, and for making clear to future stakeholders the internal and external validity of study results.

This study will test the benefits of a multilevel training program in participatory medicine designed to help PCPs in Switzerland to better diagnose patient preferences for screening and method of screening method (colonoscopy or FIT) through. If the program is successful it will increase the proportion of patients who can decide to undergo testing or not and with which method. This should increase in number of patients who are screened or intend to be screened for CRC, and thus reduce CRC deaths in the longer term.

Conditions

Interventions

OTHER

Multilevel training intervention (intervention group)

QC meetings with PCPs in the intervention group to reflect on their CRC screening practices and implement changes in sequential Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) quality improvement cycles. In the first meeting, they will be given evidence summaries on CRC screening, a decision support leaflet designed to help them discuss CRC screening with their patients and a patient decision aid in form of a brochure (Plan-Do). PCPs will receive sample FIT kits recommended for organized screening programs and will be encouraged to offer FIT tests if they have not done so before. In the second QC meeting, PCPs will be shown how to fill out the patient data collection form (Check). The third QC meeting will take place after data collection and analysis. Researchers will present their results to the QCs and PCPs will discuss subsequent steps to improve care (Act). The QC will then repeat one PDCA cycle. The control group will receive the same intervention one year later.

OTHER

Multilevel training intervention (control group with crossover)

The control group will undergo a crossover and receive the same intervention one year after the intervention group. QC meetings with PCPs in the intervention group to reflect on their CRC screening practices and implement changes in sequential Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) quality improvement cycles. In the first meeting, they will be given evidence summaries on CRC screening, a decision support leaflet designed to help them discuss CRC screening with their patients and a patient decision aid in form of a brochure (Plan-Do). PCPs will receive sample FIT kits recommended for organized screening programs and will be encouraged to offer FIT tests if they have not done so before. In the second QC meeting, PCPs will be shown how to fill out the patient data collection form (Check). The third QC meeting will take place after data collection and analysis. Researchers will present their results to the QCs and PCPs will discuss subsequent steps to improve care (Act).

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Swiss National Science Foundation

    collaborator OTHER
  • University of Bern

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Reto Auer, MD, MAS · Institute of Primary Health Care of Bern (BIHAM), University of Bern

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Model
CROSSOVER

Eligibility

Min Age
50 Years
Max Age
75 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2018-03-14
Primary Completion
2021-01-30
Completion
2021-04-30

Countries

  • Switzerland

Study Locations

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Entities

Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT03510858 on ClinicalTrials.gov