Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Interventions to Enhance Breast Cancer Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment Among Racial and Ethnic Minority Women Christopher Masi, MD, PhD Dionne Blackman, MD Monica Peek, MD, MPH University of Chicago American Cancer Society’s Bridging the Health Care Divide New Orleans, Louisiana April 19, 2007
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Breast Cancer Incidence & Mortality, Ries et al. SEER Cancer Statistics Review, 2006 IncidenceMortality Per 100,000
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Racial/Ethnic Disparities in 5-Year Breast Cancer Survival and Risk of Death, Jemal et al. Cancer 2004;101(1):3-27 Cause-Specific SurvivalAdjusted Relative Risk of Death
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Goal To review the literature and determine which clinic-based initiatives most effectively enhance breast cancer screening, diagnosis, and treatment among racial and ethnic minority women
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Method MeSH terms from the following categories: –Breast neoplasm –Study design –Racial/ethnic minorities Databases: –Medline –Cochrane –CINAHL
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Method Inclusion criteria –RCT or CCT –Published –Clinic-based –Study population > 50% minority or results analyzed by race if population < 50% minority Primary and secondary reviewer
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Conceptual Model
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Results 215 unique citations 154 eligible for full review 42 interventions –screening (36) –diagnosis (5) –treatment (2) Intervention targets –patients (20) –patients & providers (18) –providers (4)
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Screening I. Patient-targeted Interventions –Reminder-based More successful at increasing mammography among women with higher educational attainment and previous mammography –Culturally sensitive Increased mammography and breast self exams among Hispanic and Black women –Multifaceted Increased mammography regardless of race, ethnicity, education, income
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Screening II. Patient- & Provider-targeted Interventions –Reminder-based More effective at increasing mammography than patient-targeted interventions alone Effective even after out-of-pocket mammography cost removed More impact on mammography than on clinical breast exam
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Diagnosis Patient-targeted Case Management –Minimal Model Outreach, planning, referral Increased adherence to subspecialty appointments –Coordination Model Above plus advocacy, casework, reassessment Increased adherence to subspecialty appointments –Sociomedical Model Above plus assistance with housing, work, food security, substance use, domestic violence, & mental health services Increased biopsy rate and shortened time to biopsy Increased adherence to subspecialty appointments
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Treatment Patient-targeted Case Management –Sociomedical Model 1st treatment within 30 days (62% vs. 40% ) (ns) Median time to treatment (24 days vs. 29 days) (ns) Ell et al. Cancer Practice 2002;10(3):
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Treatment Patient-targeted Case Management –Sociomedical Model Breast conserving surgery (28.6% vs 18.7%) (p=.031) Radiation therapy (36% vs. 19%) (p=.003) Breast reconstruction (9.3% vs. 2.6%) (p=.054) Normal arm function (93% vs 84%) (p=.037) Goodwin et al. Journal of the American Geriatric Society 2003;51:
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (NBCCEDP) Federal program which funds breast and cervical cancer screening and diagnostic testing among uninsured and underinsured women $192 million budget in 292,601 mammograms in Ryerson & Major. National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program: National Report. 2005
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (NBCCEDP) In 2003, 42% of uninsured women reported having had mammography in previous two years 1 With 6.7 million uninsured women between the ages of years, ~3.9 million women are eligible for NBCCEDP- financed mammography 2 2 DeNavas-Walt et al. Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Nat Center for Health Statistics Health, United States, 2005
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment Act (BCCPTA) of 2000 Women diagnosed through NBCCEDP can receive treatment through the BCCPTA, a federal program which permits states to extend Medicaid benefits to uninsured women regardless of income or assets. Focus group study in 2003 revealed knowledge of BCCPTA is limited 1 Increased publicity re. BCCPTA may lead to increased mammography among low-income women 1 1 Kenney et al. Hearing Their Voices, Kaiser Family Foundation, 2004
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Conclusions Causes of racial & ethnic disparities in breast cancer mortality are several and include barriers to screening, diagnosis, and treatment Multi-faceted interventions are the most effective at increasing mammography among women with lower incomes, lower education, or language barriers More research is needed regarding interventions to improve treatment among racial/ethnic minority women
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Conclusions With the large number of uninsured Americans, the NBCCEDP and BCCPTA provide much needed support for breast cancer screening & treatment In the absence of substantive health insurance reform, additional resources should be dedicated to NBCCEDP, BCCPTA, and to interventions which address the range of barriers faced by racial & ethnic minority women
Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change A National Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation at the University of Chicago Acknowledgments Dionne Blackman, MD Monica Peek, MD, MPH Elbert Huang, MD Marshall Chin, MD, MPH Jeroan Allison, MD, MS –Special Issue Editor, Medical Care Research & Review. See October 2007 issue for the paper re. this study.